Monday, March 22, 2010

Interesting things I read (past tense)

An anti-abortion rights organization is withdrawing an award it planned to present Rep. Bart Stupak, after the Michigan Democrat announced Sunday he would support health care reform legislation.

The Susan B. Anthony List had chosen Stupak to receive the “Defender of Life” award at the “Campaign for Life Gala” Wednesday here in the nation’s capital.

Because we all know Susan B. Anthony was pro-life.

From Yglesias. Emphasis mine.

We should also, however, spare a thought for the unsung hero of comprehensive reform, McConnell and his GOP colleagues, who pushed their “no compromise” strategy to the breaking point and beyond. The theory was that non-cooperation would stress the Democratic coalition and cause the public to begin to question the enterprise. And it largely worked. But at crucial times when wavering Democrats were eager for a lifeline, the Republicans absolutely refused to throw one. White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel and other key players at various points wanted to scale aspirations down to a few regulatory tweaks and some expansion of health care for children. This idea had a lot of appeal to many in the party. But it always suffered from a fatal flaw—the Republicans’ attitude made it seem that a smaller bill was no more feasible than a big bill. Consequently, even though Scott Brown’s victory blew the Democrats off track, the basic logic of the situation pushed them back on course to universal health care.

Today, conservative anger at the Democrats is running higher than ever, and for the first time in years the GOP leadership’s blanket opposition has won them the esteem of their fanatics. But in more sober moments in the weeks and months to come, my guess is that the brighter minds on the right will recognize that their determination to turn health reform into Obama’s Waterloo sowed the seeds of their own destruction. Universal health care has been attempted many times in the past and always failed. The prospects for success were never all that bright. Many of us, myself included, at one point or another wanted to try something more moderate. But the right wing, by invariably indicating that it would settle for nothing less than total victory, inspired progressive forces to march on and win their greatest legislative victory in decades.

Paul Krugman

Instead, I want you to consider the contrast: on one side, the closing argument was an appeal to our better angels, urging politicians to do what is right, even if it hurts their careers; on the other side, callous cynicism. Think about what it means to condemn health reform by comparing it to the Civil Rights Act. Who in modern America would say that L.B.J. did the wrong thing by pushing for racial equality? (Actually, we know who: the people at the Tea Party protest who hurled racial epithets at Democratic members of Congress on the eve of the vote.)

And a word of my own on “death panels.” Now that healthcare reform has passed (barring something catastrophic in the Senate), I predict the same people who whipped their followers into a froth over the government using death panels to put granny down, I predict that these same people will start to talk about the burden of keeping the poor and illegal immigrants alive. They are costing us money in insurance. Why should they get a life-saving transplant, they will say. I’ve done everything right all my life so why should I be punished.

Predators. I predict they’ll say child predators can get health insurance and it will cost insurance money to keep them alive. Those costs will be  passed on to us. In short, that they very people who fear mongered are now going to be the ones who want to go back to the old system where they can choose who is worthy of life-saving treatment.

[Via http://impliedobserver.wordpress.com]

Pediatrics and Web 2.0

Webicina.com is getting closer to the 50th collection and the newest addition is Pediatrics and Web 2.0 that focuses on selected mobile apps, blogs, podcasts, Twitterers, communities, slideshows and many more social media tools dedicated to pediatrics.
Pediatrics

The number of websites created for pediatricians  is constantly growing and it is getting harder to find relevant, reliable resources, but with PeRSSonalized Pediatrics it will be a piece of cake for You.

webicina newsletter

[Via http://scienceroll.com]

Friday, March 19, 2010

One more reason to use precaution while engaging in sexual intercourse

A 50-year-old man presented with a 1-month history of mild, generalized pruritus. A total-body examination of the patient's skin revealed small, yellowish-brown flecks in the hair of the upper arm, chest, and axilla on the left side and in the pubic area.

Dermoscopy showed pubic lice (Phthirus pubis), colloquially termed “crabs”. The pubic louse is classically a sexually transmitted pediculus and is aptly named, since it is most commonly found in pubic hair. In heavy infestations, the trunk, limbs, and eyelashes can be colonized.

Dermoscopy revealed the typical broad body of the crab and the large middle and hind legs, which have thick claws for grasping hairs.

The patient was treated with two total-body applications of topical permethrin 5% cream, which were applied 1 week apart. Household members were also treated. Complete resolution was achieved without recurrence.

Source

_______________________________________________

According to emedicinehealth, the possible causes are:

  • The source of infection for pubic lice is intimate contact with an infected person. Therefore, pubic lice are often transmitted during sex.
  • Since transmission occurs during intimate contact, actual sexual intercourse is not necessary for the spread of pubic lice.
  • Pubic lice can also be transmitted by contact with contaminated belongings such as towels, bed sheets, or clothing.
  • Crabs are transmitted through any intimate contact. Lice do not jump or fly, so actual contact is necessary for transmission. An individual may acquire an infection by sharing bedding or towels.
  • Cats, dogs, and other pets are not involved in the spread of human lice. Your pet cannot become infested with human lice and transmit the lice to another person.

For more information click here.

According to MedicineNet, there are three stages in the life of a pubic louse: the nit, the nymph, and the adult.

Nit: Nits are pubic lice eggs. They are hard to see and are found firmly attached to the hair shaft.
They are about the size of the mark at the end of this arrow Nit size illustration. They are oval and usually yellow to white. Nits take about 1 week to hatch.

Nymph: The nit hatches into a baby louse called a nymph. It looks like an adult pubic louse, but is smaller. Nymphs mature into adults about 7 days after hatching. To live, the nymph must feed on blood.

Adult: The adult pubic louse is about this size Pubic louse size illustration and resembles a miniature crab when viewed through a strong magnifying glass. Pubic lice have six legs, but their two front legs are very large and look like the pincher claws of a crab; this how they got the nickname “crabs.” Pubic lice are tan to greyish-white in color. Females lay nits; they are usually larger than males. To live, adult lice need to feed on blood. If the louse falls off a person, it dies within 1-2 days.

For more information, click here.

[Via http://1websurfer.wordpress.com]

Google


[Via http://fatconditions.wordpress.com]

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

DNA nanotubes as a drug delivery system

Medical nanotech news from McGill University.

The release:

DNA nanotechnology breakthrough offers promising applications in medicine McGill researchers create DNA nanotubes able to carry and selectively release materials

This release is available in French.

A team of McGill Chemistry Department researchers led by Dr. Hanadi Sleiman has achieved a major breakthrough in the development of nanotubes – tiny “magic bullets” that could one day deliver drugs to specific diseased cells. Sleiman explains that the research involves taking DNA out of its biological context. So rather than being used as the genetic code for life, it becomes a kind of building block for tiny nanometre-scale objects.

Using this method, the team created the first examples of DNA nanotubes that encapsulate and load cargo, and then release it rapidly and completely when a specific external DNA strand is added. One of these DNA structures is only a few nanometres wide but can be extremely long, about 20,000 nanometres. (A nanometre is one-10,000th the diameter of a human hair.)

Until now, DNA nanotubes could only be constructed by rolling a two-dimensional sheet of DNA into a cylinder. Sleiman’s method allows nanotubes of any shape to be formed and they can either be closed to hold materials or porous to release them. Materials such as drugs could then be released when a particular molecule is present.

One of the possible future applications for this discovery is cancer treatment. However, Sleiman cautions, “we are still far from being able to treat diseases using this technology; this is only a step in that direction. Researchers need to learn how to take these DNA nanostructures, such as the nanotubes here, and bring them back to biology to solve problems in nanomedicine, from drug delivery, to tissue engineering to sensors,” she said.

The team’s discovery was published on March 14, 2010 in Nature Chemistry. The research was made possible with funding from the National Science and Engineering Research Council and the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research.

###

On the Web: http://www.hanadisleiman.com

Video link: http://snurl.com/uw2q1

[Via http://davidkirkpatrick.wordpress.com]

Milton R Wolf, MD, Obama Health Care Bill, Primum nil nocere, First do no harm, Obama cousin, Sean Hannity show, March 16, 2010

Milton R Wolf, MD,  Obama Health Care Bill, Primum nil nocere, First do no harm

Dr Milton R Wolf, a cousin of Barack Obama, was on the Sean Hannity Show on Fox, March 16, 2010. I was very impressed with Dr. Wolf. He stayed consistent with his earlier statements that he was against Obamacare and that the Health Care Bill will hurt our health care system and likely prevent some people from getting care.

Reported here March 12, 2010.

“Dr Milton R Wolf, Obama cousin, Obama Health Care Bill”

“Primum nil nocere.”First, do no harm. This guiding principle is a bedrock of medical care. Sadly, those politicians who would rewrite our health care laws do not live in the same universe as do the doctors and health care professionals who must practice it.
“Imagine if, like physicians, politicians were personally held to the incredibly high level of scrutiny that includes civil and financial liability for any unintended consequence of their decisions. Imagine if they were forced to spend tens of thousands of dollars each year on malpractice insurance and still faced the threat of multimillion-dollar lawsuits with every single decision they made. If so, a government takeover of health care would be the furthest thing from their minds.
Obamacare proponents would have us believe that we will add 30 million patients to the system without adding providers, we will see no decline in the quality of care for the millions of Americans currently happy with the system, and -if you act now!- we will save money in the process. But why stop there? Why not promise it will no longer rain on weekends and every day will be a great hair day?
America has the finest health care delivery system in the world. Let’s not forget that and put it at risk in the name of reform. Desperate souls across the globe flock to our shores and cross our borders every day to seek our care. Why? Our system provides cures while the government-run systems from which they flee do not. Compare Europe’s common cancer mortality rates to America’s: breast cancer – 52 percent higher in Germany and 88 percent higher in the United Kingdom; prostate cancer – a staggering 604 percent higher in the United Kingdom and 457 percent higher in Norway; colon cancer – 40 percent higher in the United Kingdom.
Look closer at the United Kingdom. Britain’s higher cancer mortality rate results in 25,000 more cancer deaths per year compared to a similar population size in the United States. But because the U.S. population is roughly five times larger than the United Kingdom’s, that would translate into 125,000 unnecessary American cancer deaths every year. This is more than all the mothers and fathers, aunts and uncles, cousins and children in Topeka, Kan. And keep in mind, these numbers are for cancer alone. America also has better survival rates for other major killers, such as heart attacks and strokes. Whatever we do, let us not surrender the great gains we have made. First, do no harm. Lives are at stake.””

Read more:

http://citizenwells.wordpress.com/2010/03/12/dr-milton-r-wolf-obama-cousin-obama-health-care-bill-primum-nil-nocere-first-do-no-harm-fixing-price-at-any-cost-wolf-blasts-obamacare-america-has-the-finest-health-care-delivery-system-in-the/

[Via http://citizenwells.wordpress.com]

Monday, March 15, 2010

One Step Back from the Edge

One Step Back from the Edge

A person should not have to learn the most important lessons about life from experience. Most of them can be taught, if we know enough to teach them to our children.

Not knowing those lessons, not knowing how to cope with the adversities that life throws at every one of us, means we must suffer pain. Not just the pain of each tragedy, but also the pain associated with the stress of having a severe problem (or a bunch of them) and not knowing what to do about it.

My sister didn’t know. She smoked herself to death from cancer at age 54, never understanding why she had to live alone, on welfare, never having anyone she could trust or depend on. Never having a friend in her life. Never having any happiness in her marriage because she didn’t know how. Never being able to hold a job because she didn’t realize employers need skills and employees who can get along with each other.

Her children don’t know. Her daughter, my niece, at one time displeased with me because I told her about lies her mother had told about her and about me, suggested that I should kill myself. Her son, my nephew, joined an extreme religious cult where he feels loved and respected.

No doubt my father chose a remote rural area to rent the apartment above a general store when I was a baby because he didn’t want his family to suffer the indignities he had suffered as a child. He and my mother didn’t know that children learn from each other by playing together. I rarely saw any other children and never played with one until I was nearly six years old.

My parents understood that parenting consisted of providing food, shelter and clothing to their children. And punishing them when they did something wrong. It never occurred to them to teach a child what the child needs to know to avoid getting into trouble. My parents didn’t teach their children anything. Except how to eat with a knife and fork and how to use toilet paper.

My mother, who never worked a day after she got pregnant with me, eventually needed to hire a cleaning lady once a week because she couldn’t keep up with dusting, cleaning and laundry. No one knew why. Chronic fatigue syndrome, now recognized as a widespread problem, was just called laziness in those days. My mother never talked about it.

The same way she never talked about why she chased me around our house at couple of times when I was 10, brandishing a broom and threatening to kill me if she caught me. I hadn’t a clue about why she was angry. But I didn’t let her catch me either. I couldn’t spell “menopause” let alone understand what it meant. All I knew was her words.

My father, a naturally clever man who never managed to pass grade nine, found considerable success in business. He became an alcoholic because he had no idea how to cope with the stresses associated with his business success.

He adopted the advice of someone he worked with as a young man. It was: Never learn how to do something if you don’t want to do that thing. My father disliked working with his hands. One of his employees, a mechanic, bought him a simple screwdriver one day because he thought my father should be able to tighten a screw himself. My father never taught me any skills. He didn’t have any mechanical skills or interest in learning to do things with his hands. He never used the screwdriver either.

My father’s father had a thriving florist business until the First World War destroyed it. My father was five years old when his father committed suicide.

Suicide is not genetic, but it tends to run in families. I didn’t want to become an alcoholic or to kill myself, though I knew no coping skills because I had never been taught any. By anyone. Lacking coping skills, I now know, is the leading cause of alcoholism, suicide and many other severe problems.

As I knew nothing about being a father, in fact I was afraid of little children, I avoided having much to do with my own children when they were young. Their mother raised them through those first few critically important years of their lives. She taught them everything they knew. They became everything she was.

She believed that success at work was more important that success as a parent. She believed that money was the sign of success. That’s what the society we lived in taught. She left our kids with me when they were about ten years old and went out to be successful as a school principal and a savvy investor. She had money, a great car and an impressive house. She had taught those values to our children.

She died of cancer at age 44, having spent her last year alone, at home, rarely receiving a visitor. Neither her children nor her business friends had anything more to gain from her, so they abandoned her. When she died, our daughter didn’t even hold a funeral because she thought no one would come.

After their mother died, our children decided they wanted nothing more to do with me. They wanted money and I didn’t have much. I didn’t believe that money was the most important thing in life. They thought I was stupid. My daughter told her children–whom I was never allowed to see–that all their grandparents were dead. Only one was.

Sitting on a loading dock on a break from my first summer job at age 15, I overheard two men talking. One said to the other, “I never have conversations with young people under age 25. They never know enough to talk about.” As I thought about that, I realized that he was right.

I had no skills or hobbies. I had learned nothing from books or newspapers. In fact, I could barely read. I didn’t have friends I could learn from. My teachers repeatedly told my parents I was lazy. It never occurred to them that I couldn’t read. It never occurred to them that I had a learning problem caused by restriction of blood flow to my brain at birth–I was born breech. I can think as well as anyone, but I do it slower and my capacity to learn at any one time is more limited than most.

I have a very mild form of cerebral palsy, undiagnosed until recently, as a result of that birth problem. When I went to school, every kid was either good, a trouble maker or lazy. My teachers had little trouble placing me in that third category. In reality, life in schools is little better for kids with problems today. “Special needs” is a category for kids with severe and fairly easily recognized problems.

I passed through high school without ever reading a book all the way through. I received a certificate after a three year course at college without ever having read a book all the way through. I passed through teachers college without having read a book all the way through.

I went to York University, in Toronto, and received my B.A. without ever reading a book all the way through. I received a Master of Education degree from the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, at the University of Toronto, without ever having read a book all the way through.

That’s survival. That shows how a person can learn to cope with challenges and problems if they learn how in time.

I also taught elementary school for 17 years, around the same period I was taking university courses. A few times the children I taught were reading books for reading assignments that I had not read myself. I was functionally illiterate. I didn’t know that because no one had told me.

In fact, I was functionally illiterate until after I left teaching and had started my own business with my wife.

Although I had written long papers in my university and post graduate courses, most of what I wrote had come straight out of my head, not from books. I discovered how to snatch quotes from relevant texts without actually reading those books. I only started to learn how to write something that people other than professors would find interesting in the late 1990s.

In 2005, my book Turning It Around: Causes and Cures for Today’s Epidemic Social Problems was published. A social problem is any problem that is experienced by enough people in a community that it becomes a community problem. Like drugs, violence, addictions and so on.

I found solutions to problems most people believe are unsolvable, consequences of the way life is in the 21st Century. How? Because I wasn’t tied to what others had written in books. Books by so-called experts who told how tragic social problems are but offered nothing in the way of solutions.

The solutions begin at home. They begin when each child is born. They begin when a child is taught what he or she needs to know, when they need to know it.

That begins when young adults know about children and how they develop. It begins when adolescents and young adults learn the skills of parenting.

That’s the message I want to take to the world.

Here’s one comment written a few days ago by a member of one of my internet groups, directed to me:

“During all these years as, member of the group had the I privilege evidence that you are extremely cultured and have an excellent text.

With you I learned an enormity of things. And reading your mensages I know sail that for all the areas of the knowledge.”

That was written by a friend in Brazil, one I know as Maita. “Maita” in Portuguese, means “little mother.”

Maita’s real name is Maria Alice Baptista de Oliveira. That’s Dr. Oliveira, a pediatrician with decades of experience at bringing babies into the world and teaching mothers how to look after them.

Maita is one of many people, some of whom are medical doctors, some professors, people in every field of life including factory workers, who live on six continents, who believe that there is a better way to raise children than most of us have been using over the past few thousands of generations.

It’s a complex world we live in. A complex world creates complex problems. Those complex problems require solutions so complex they are unmanageable.

The only way to change anything is to prevent the problems from arising in the first place.

That’s what Turning It Around is all about.

Until recently I have been experiencing stress–not at a controllable level but at a primal level beyond the control of my conscious brain–stress that has taken me to the edge of sanity and suicide. I have stepped back from that edge. I survived. Again.

Stress can be the cause of many physical diseases and organ failures. But it’s also an effect. Stress results when a person lacks the emotional resources to cope with problems in their life. Knowledge about stress and the coping skills needed to avoid it are teachable. Teaching them is easy, cheap and would not meet any resistance because it helps whole communities.

I want to teach people the skills they need to cope with problems that seem insurmountable, that seem beyond their control. That begins with teaching children, right after they are born.

That’s who I am. That’s what I do. If you want to help spread the word, you are welcome to join us. It doesn’t cost anything. All you have to do is talk to people. It’s that easy. But nothing will change until we get enough people talking to each other about this.

Lots of people are talking about this, but it’s a big world with lots of problems.

As adults we don’t necessarily always learn from our experience. Some of us make the same mistakes over and over, causing ourselves and others around us a great deal of grief. However, life lessons we learned as children usually stay with us and shape our lives.

Teaching children what they need to know about life and coping with it are as important as learning to read and do arithmetic. We need to teach the children. They want to learn. They want to know about life.

Bill Allin is the author of Turning It Around: Causes and Cures for Today’s Epidemic Social Problems, a guidebook for teachers and parents who want to know what children need and when they need it, rather than what adults believe children should be forced to learn.
Learn more at http://billallin.com

[Via http://tiabuilder.wordpress.com]

Consumers Union: another conspiracy against Americans

Coming in this morning, I heard an ad on AM from Consumers Union (the people who do Consumers Reports), supporting fixing health care NOW. OK, granted, they didn’t say HOW to fix it. But in the current climate, the ad could only be interpreted as a call to pass the laws now in Congress.

This ad identified CU as a non-profit. Now, what I don’t know about nonprofit law could fill a book (in spite of me having been President of one), but I’m pretty clear that political lobbying is not permitted, and this is pretty clearly lobbying. They brag about it here.

Hey, Jim Guest, how does it feel to have just flushed your organization’s credibility down the toilet?

[Via http://jeffreyquick.wordpress.com]

Friday, March 12, 2010

Karl Rove “Proud” of U.S. Waterboarding

 

As part of his ongoing media blitz to promote his book, Courage and Consequences, Karl Rove appeared Thursday on the BBC program Newsnight, where he told his host that he takes pride in the Bush administration’s so-called “enhanced interrogation” program. “I’m proud that we used techniques that broke the will of these terrorists and gave us [...]

Karl Rove “Proud” of U.S. Waterboarding
Fri, 12 Mar 2010 18:22:00 GMT

 

It’s an interesting enigmatic condition.  Whereby Christian conservatives are actually showing pride in treatment of other people that borderlines on outright murder.  It’s just another example that the Christian conservatives who claim to be pro-life continually support all sorts of forms of behavior that are not only anti-Jesus Christ and anti-God.  But are totally and completely anti-life as well.

The Christian conservatives and the Catholics don’t ever want to be responsible for the fact that since 78% of the United States is pro-life Christian that basically means that 78% of all the women and children murdered in the United States are killed by pro-life Christians and Catholics. It also means that Christians in United States are demanding that the world understand that to them being pro-life means killing, because while the Christian conservatives and Catholics are demanding that everyone understand they are pro-life. They are with their own actions, supporting a number of forms of killing, which means that they are NOT pro-life..

  1. 78% of all the women murdered in the United States are killed by pro-life  Christians and Catholics  .
  2. 78% of all the children abused in the United States are abused by pro-life  Christians and Catholics .
  3. 78% of all the children murdered in the United States are murdered by pro-life  Christians and Catholics .
  4. 78% of all the murders that take place in the United States are committed by pro-life  Christians and Catholics .
  5. 78% of all the soldiers in the United States, who go out and kill are pro-life Christians and Catholics .
  6. 78% of the membership of the National Rifle Association, which support GUNS THAT KILL are pro-life  Christians and Catholics .
  7. Every single white supremacist group in the history of United States has always been white fundamentalist pro-life Christian. And these white supremacist groups are dedicated to killing anyone who is not white and Christian.
  8. The Army of God is a white fundamentalist Christian group who is dedicated to murdering and killing every single nonwhite Christian in the United States.
  9. 78% of all the people who favor and support the death penalty meaning killing people for committing crimes are pro-life  Christians and Catholics.
  10. 78% of all the ministers in the United States who carry firearms to church and are threatening to kill anyone who comes near the church was not white and Christian are pro-life  Christians and Catholics .
  11. 78% of all the crimes against gay people in the United States are done by pro-life  Christians and Catholics .
  12. Every month between one and two transgendered females are murdered and every single one of these killings is done by pro-life  Christian.
  13. White fundamentalist Christians were the ones who demand the right to own black Americans and to kill them whenever they wanted to during the signing of the Declaration of Independence .
  14. White fundamentalist Christians were the ones who took over the Republican Party  during the battle of Washington  and try to overthrow the United States government under president Hoover at the battle of Washington in 1932.
  15. White fundamentalist Christians were the ones who took over the Republican Party  on the evening before the signing of the Emancipation Proclamation during the American Civil War . And who then used the Republican Party  to hire John Wilkes Booth  to murder Pres. Abraham Lincoln .

When you have all these forms of killing being supported by pro-life  Christians and Catholics  it’s easy to understand that the pro-life  Christians and Catholics are demanding that everyone else be responsible for their own actions. But the white fundamentalist Christians and Catholics under no circumstances want to be responsible for anything they do because they are demanding that the entire world understand that to them being pro-life  means killing, because that’s what they support killing. That’s why that those who claim to be pro-life  are now becoming known as nothing more than, “Killers For Christ”. And of course it the white fundamentalist Christians and Catholics don’t like what I’m saying or want to take exception to what I’m saying they need to disprove every single item in this journal entry and my see also section below.
See Also:

  1. Jesus Christ
  2. The Sermon On The Mount
  3. God
  4. The Bible
  5. The Ten Commandments
  6. John The Baptist
  7. The Burning Times
  8. The Crusades
  9. Joan Of Arc
  10. The Children Of Lourdes
  11. The Children of Fatima
  12. The Spanish Inquisition
  13. The American Civil War
  14. Slavery
  15. The Emancipation Proclamation
  16. Abraham Lincoln
  17. John Wilkes Booth
  18. The Christian Conservatives
  19. World War I
  20. Prohibition
  21. The Great Depression
  22. The Battle of Washington
  23. World War II
  24. The Korean War
  25. The Vietnam War
  26. Richard Nixon
  27. Oliver North
  28. The Iran-Contra Affair
  29. The Gulf War
  30. The Savings-And-Loan Crisis
  31. Bill Clinton
  32. The Balanced Budget Amendment
  33. The Iraq War
  34. The Kondratieff Wave
  35. Profitability Analysis
  36. Financial Analysis
  37. Vance Packard
  38. Laissez-Faire
  39. Capital Punishment
  40. Homophobia
  41. Xenophobia
  42. Racism
  43. Prejudice
  44. Bigotry
  45. Fascism
  46. Eugenics
  47. White Supremacy
  48. Mein Kampf
  49. Adolf Hitler
  50. The Ku Klux Klan
  51. The Army of God
  52. US Domestic Violence Statistics
  53. US Child Abuse Statistics
  54. US Child Mortality Statistics
  55. US Religious Demographic Statistics
  56. Gay-Rights
  57. Transgenderism
  58. Women’s Rights
  59. Pro-Choice
  60. NRA
  61. Oliver Wendell Holmes
  62. The US Constitution
  63. The Bill Of Rights
  64. Recording Telephone Conversations
  65. Treason
  66. Sedition
  67. How The Republicans Use The Constitution To Lie (article 1, section 6, subsection b) of The US Constitution
  68. My Biographical Profile
  69. My Philosophy Of Life
  70. 24 Hour Suicide And Crisis Help Center
  71. How to stop a suicide
  72. Entries And Articles of Significance…
  73. For Those Who Said I Never Knew Ronald Reagan, They Lied
  74. My Encounter With Joan Baez
  75. My Time Studying The Anasazi Indians
  76. My 250 Million Variable Characteristic Hieroglyphic Language
  77. My Tribute To Jim Varney
  78. The Pebble And The Penguin
  79. A Diamond On A Sea Of Glass
  80. Regarding Me And My Journal
  81. My Spinal Fusion And Me Doing 250 Situps
  82. An Installment Notation of The Maschke Family History and Legacy
  83. It’s A Crime
  84. Hey God! You There? I’m Tired… Ok?
  85. In The Midst Of Darkness The Smallest Spark Lights My Way…
  86. I Wrote Something A Long Time Ago…
  87. Kmart To Close Five More Ohio Stores
  88. The Vanishing Of America
  89. A Place Called Earth
  90. How Ya Gonna Keep ‘Em Down On The Farm
  91. Sounds
  92. Reality …
  93. Second Gear
  94. My Financial Analysis Of The Global Economic System
  95. Adventures In Technocracy
  96. An Explanation Of Vernacular Dynamics and Sequencing Regarding Various Forms of Advocacy
  97. The Tortoise and the Hare
  98. The Silent Seconds…
  99. Quantum Mechanics And Newtonian Metaphysics
  100. My Global Warming Research

For the record, I am pro-life. I do not support violence against, or the killing of any human being under any circumstances! And the only way that I ever deviate from that stand is that I do not believe that God has ever given any human the right to dictate to any woman how she is to arbitrate her life with the Almighty, and/or God. Therefore, I believe that all women deserve the right to choose for themselves the fate of their own bodies, pursuant to their relationship with the Almighty, and/or God. For an expanded explanation please see my article entitled: "Second Gear"

[Via http://nicolemaschke3.wordpress.com]

Intelligent Design . . Not That Intelligent

Everyone is more or less familiar with the various forms of creationism today, Christianity, Islam, and Intelligent Design, despite the fact that most advocators of Intelligent Design claim it to be a scientific theory just like evolution (although, it’s far from it). However, what most people are not familiar with is how fragile, and imperfect, albeit complex, we actually are.

Now, I don’t mean to attack religion or faith. They had their place in society, culture, and history, and maybe they still do, that is a topic for another post. No, I merely wish to shed some light on the subject of human design.

Working on my second year of medical school, and having scratched the tip of the iceberg with regards to human anatomy and physiology, especially now studying neuroanatomy and neurophysiology, I’ve come to realize, even moreso, how imperfect we are built, and not only that, but how many unconscience mechanisms are in place controlling our thoughts and actions. Makes you wonder if there really is such a thing as free will.

Countless examples in human anatomy show how poorly we really are built. Maybe the first example that pops into my mind when thinking about this is hernias, or in other words, when things in your body end up someplace else, where they normally wouldn’t or shouldn’t be. Hernias can happen almost anywhere, especially between the cavities of the thorax and abdomen, through the diaphragm. What about the blind spot of the eye? Or the lousy back support we have (as a result of evolving from animals that walk on four legs, to animals that walk on two)? The list goes on.

Looking at human physiology, especially neurophysiology, also opened my eyes to this topic. The brain alone is highly complex, and still somewhat of a mystery. But, we know there are several parts which control how we think, act, and live, that we are not even conscience of. One example that really stuck in my head is the chotomic and non-chotomic mechanisms of eye fixation. When we look with our eyes, the chotomic mechanism controls the way our eyes look for a subject to focus on, while non-chotomic fixation allows our eyes to focus on a subject once found. A problem in one of these mechanisms, and you lose the ability to either focus on a subject, or to look away after focusing on a subject (this person has to literally cover their eyes to break the focus,).

Don’t get me wrong, the body is an incredible machine, its structure and physiology are highly complex, and truly amazing. All of the structures and mechanisms are not even fully understood yet. But, just like anything else, there are flaws, and it is not something to forget.

And don’t take my word for it either, search the internet, or library, and find several articles, books, and posts on this very topic.

[Via http://completethisform.wordpress.com]

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Nanoparticles Target Cancer Cells

Nanotechnology was the technologies of the future. Now the future is looking more and more like the present as Cornell researchers have attached antibodies to nanoparticles to attack colorectal cancer cells.

ITHACA, N.Y. – Another weapon in the arsenal against cancer: Nanoparticles that identify, target and kill specific cancer cells while leaving healthy cells alone.

Led by Carl Batt, the Liberty Hyde Bailey Professor of Food Science, the researchers synthesized nanoparticles – shaped something like a dumbbell – made of gold sandwiched between two pieces of iron oxide. They then attached antibodies, which target a molecule found only in colorectal cancer cells, to the particles. Once bound, the nanoparticles are engulfed by the cancer cells.

To kill the cells, the researchers use a near-infrared laser, which is a wavelength that doesn’t harm normal tissue at the levels used, but the radiation is absorbed by the gold in the nanoparticles. This causes the cancer cells to heat up and die.

“This is a so-called ’smart’ therapy,” Batt said. “To be a smart therapy, it should be targeted, and it should have some ability to be activated only when it’s there and then kills just the cancer cells.”

One can imagine a variety of ways to activate toxins once those toxins have entered cancer cells. The challenge is that to just come up with antibodies that will target all the cancer in a body is a major challenge.

I am wondering whether cancer will ultimately be stopped by precisely delivered poisons or by pieces of RNA delivered into cancer cells to suppress and activate selected genes in the DNA. It is like the difference between bombs and software. Blow up the cells up or regain control over them?

[Via http://dromeish.wordpress.com]

Tip # 5: Be Different!

Tip # 5: Be Different.  Stand out in the application process!

There are far too many “cookie cutter” applicants who all look the same on paper and in black interview suits.  You need to set yourself apart from all of the other applicants.

Figure out what is special about you and what you have to offer the field of medicine that is different from all of the other applicants.  Get involved in a variety of activities and when you find something that you love, stick with it.

Participate in activities because you really want to do them and enjoy them, not because they will look good on your resume.

Share

[Via http://darwishmd.wordpress.com]

Monday, March 8, 2010

Cancer killing nanotech assassins

Nanotechnology is proving to have many medical applications, and the bulk of those apps are in cancer research. Here’s the latest from Cornell.

The release:

Like little golden assassins, ’smart’ nanoparticles identify, target and kill cancer cells

ITHACA, N.Y. – Another weapon in the arsenal against cancer: Nanoparticles that identify, target and kill specific cancer cells while leaving healthy cells alone.

Led by Carl Batt, the Liberty Hyde Bailey Professor of Food Science, the researchers synthesized nanoparticles – shaped something like a dumbbell – made of gold sandwiched between two pieces of iron oxide. They then attached antibodies, which target a molecule found only in colorectal cancer cells, to the particles. Once bound, the nanoparticles are engulfed by the cancer cells.

To kill the cells, the researchers use a near-infrared laser, which is a wavelength that doesn’t harm normal tissue at the levels used, but the radiation is absorbed by the gold in the nanoparticles. This causes the cancer cells to heat up and die.

“This is a so-called ’smart’ therapy,” Batt said. “To be a smart therapy, it should be targeted, and it should have some ability to be activated only when it’s there and then kills just the cancer cells.”

The goal, said lead author and biomedical graduate student Dickson Kirui, is to improve the technology and make it suitable for testing in a human clinical trial. The researchers are now working on a similar experiment targeting prostate cancer cells.

“If, down the line, you could clinically just target the cancer cells, you could then spare the health surrounding cells from being harmed – that is the critical thing,” Kirui said.

Gold has potential as a material key to fighting cancer in future smart therapies. It is biocompatible, inert and relatively easy to tweak chemically. By changing the size and shape of the gold particle, Kirui and colleagues can tune them to respond to different wavelengths of energy.

Once taken up by the researchers’ gold particles, the cancer cells are destroyed by heat – just a few degrees above normal body temperature – while the surrounding tissue is left unharmed. Such a low-power laser does not have any effect on surrounding cells because that particular wavelength does not heat up cells if they are not loaded up with nanoparticles, the researchers explained.

Using iron oxide – which is basically rust – as the other parts of the particles might one day allow scientists to also track the progress of cancer treatments using magnetic resonance imaging, Kirui said, by taking advantage of the particles’ magnetic properties.

###

The research was funded by the Sloan Foundation and the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, which has been a partner with Cornell since 1999 to bring laboratory work to clinical testing. The research is reported in the Feb. 15 online edition of the journal Nanotechnology.

Text by Anne Ju, Cornell Chronicle

[Via http://davidkirkpatrick.wordpress.com]

Just keep swimming...

I went here again. After vowing I wouldn’t. But this time it was awesome. Probably because I was one of the more, um, enthusiastic campers this year. Maybe it was the anticipation of a night of inebriation. A night that I thought of surprisingly often during the week leading up to it, thinking “Yes, right now you are lugging three bags full of notes, a computer, your lunch AND dinner and don’t look like coming home before 9pm but…there is a alcohol-induced relaxation in four sleeps.”

I am now that someone who looks longingly forward to getting drunk. Having just looked at treating alcohol-dependance I’m aware that’s one big step in an interesting direction. I now understand my friend,who, when he started med 6 six ago, tried to explain that when you work so hard, you have to play hard. And fast. To get the maximum out of that allocated night.

My study routine has been more serious this year. More midnight oil. More caffeine. More stationary involved. There are scissors, glue sticks, coloured pens, sticky tab things and multiple books. I’m just barely keeping my head above the surface of the information tidal wave by grasping onto this ridiculous amount of stationary. It’s keeping me afloat.

I am slightly behind but I know I can make it up if I study all this weekend. Something I wouldn’t even contemplate last year, but now is just a given. The work has to be done. So it will be done. The end.

My bachelor-of-arts-habits just won’t cut it with Med. The long afternoon reading sessions curled up with a novel and a tea. Weekends of recipes that came with cooking times of days, not minutes. Ringing friends to go do something, anything, anywhere because “I’m bored”. Whole “days off”. These concepts just won’t fit inside this new year. They didn’t fit last year, no matter how hard I tried to make them.

Reading blogs for 10 minutes. Sitting on the sun-drenched balcony for a quick breakfast. Tea in the library. Meals of dip + bread + fruit. Packets in my locker. Supplements. Calling a neglected friend whilst walking to or from uni, or waiting for lunch to heat up in the common room microwave. Afternoons off. Sleeping.

These might just do.

For now.

[Via http://shesmedicallyblonde.wordpress.com]

Friday, March 5, 2010

Nine new electronic reference resources

One of my favorite electronic collections is the Credo Reference collection.  It includes well over 400 reference works, and what makes it amazing is that you can search them all at the same time.   These items have just been added to the collection:

(Want to access databases from off-campus?  Read this.)

Psychology:

Sun, Ron, ed. The Cambridge handbook of computational psychology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008. (Publisher’s description)

Twol, Graham J., et al., eds. Dictionary of forensic psychology. Cullompton, Devon, UK: Willan, 2008. (Publisher’s description)

Nadel, Lynn, ed. Encyclopedia of cognitive science. Chichester, West Sussex: John Wiley, 2005. (Publisher’s description)

Social sciences:

Flannery, Daniel J., Alexander T. Vazsonyi, Irwin D. Waldman, eds. The Cambridge handbook of violent behavior and aggression. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007. (Publisher’s description)

Rowley, Charles K., and Friedrich Schneider, eds. The encyclopedia of public choice. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2004. (Publisher’s description)

Science:

Porteous, Andrew, ed. Dictionary of environmental science and technology. Chichester, West Sussex, England: Wiley, 2008. (Publisher’s description)

Cooper, David N., ed. Encyclopedia of the human genome. Chichester: Wiley, 2005. (Publisher’s description)

Medicine:

Ramachandran, V.S., ed. Encyclopedia of the human brain. San Diego, CA: Academic Press, 2002. (Publisher’s description)

History:

Wilson, Katharina M., and Nadia Margolis, eds. Women in the Middle Ages: an encyclopedia. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 2004. (Publisher’s description)

[Via http://mckillopcataloger.wordpress.com]

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

A common variant of the latrophilin 3 gene, LPHN3, confers susceptibility to ADHD and predicts effectiveness of stimulant medication

Recent advance in the genetic study of ADHD

Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) has a very high heritability (0.8), suggesting that about 80% of phenotypic variance is due to genetic factors. This study used the integration of statistical and functional approaches to discover a novel gene that contributes to ADHD. For the statistical approach, the researchers started with a linkage study based on large multigenerational families in a population isolate, followed by fine mapping of targeted regions using a family-based design. Family- and population-based association studies in five samples from disparate regions of the world were used for replication. Brain imaging studies were performed to evaluate gene function. The linkage study discovered a genome region harbored in the Latrophilin 3 gene (LPHN3).

In the world-wide samples (total n=6360, with 2627 ADHD cases and 2531 controls) statistical association of LPHN3 and ADHD was confirmed. Functional studies revealed that LPHN3 variants are expressed in key brain regions related to attention and activity, affect metabolism in neural circuits implicated in ADHD, and are associated with response to stimulant medication. Linkage and replicated association of ADHD with a novel non-candidate gene (LPHN3) provide new insights into the genetics, neurobiology, and treatment of ADHD.

Authors: M Arcos-Burgos, M Jain, M T Acosta et. al.
National Human Genome Research Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA.
Published in: Molecular Psychiatry advance online publication 16 February 2010;doi: 10.1038/mp.2010.6

[Via http://mohdjamil.wordpress.com]

Monday, March 1, 2010

Health 2.0 in News: Self-Guided Research and Dangers of Google Buzz

  • Online video viewing accelerates – where is Pharma? (Pharma Strategy Blog)

The number of videos viewed grew almost 150%, from 14.3 billion to 33.2 billion, while the duration of the average video viewed grew 28%, from 3.2 to 4.1 minutes.

  • The top-10 words doctor writers should ban (The Doctor Writer): Really valid suggestions including benign or acute.
  • Medicine 2.0 in a historical perspective (Biomedicine on Display)
  • Google Buzz “antisocial networking” exposed details of “estranged spouses, current lovers, attorneys and doctors” (Clinical Cases and Images): “Doctors should be very cautious when using social media to communicate with patients. In general, “friending” patients on Facebook, Buzz and Twitter is not a good idea at the current level of social network services, and is best avoided.”

  • Is Self-Guided Research Dangerous to Your Health? (The Decision Tree)
  • The Connected Physician (Pharma 2.0): Bunny Ellerin discusses the recent Manhattan Research Report focusing on physicians.
  • Researcher Creates ‘Facebook for Scientists’ (New York Times):

Enter ResearchGATE, which its founder Dr. Ijad Madisch (pictured) fairly describes as “Facebook for scientists.” In close to two years of operation, ResearchGate has built a social network of more than 250,000 researchers from 196 countries. Over 1,000 subgroups have been formed for specific disciplines, and 60,000 research documents have been uploaded for sharing with others on the site. These guys aren’t pretending they’re farmers.

//

[Via http://scienceroll.com]

Friday, February 26, 2010

U.S. agencies join in bid to speed drug development

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – With an aim of getting experimental new drugs to people quicker, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and National Institutes of Health announced a plan on Wednesday to work more closely together.

Under the new arrangement, the NIH will better design some of its basic research so that potential new drugs can get into the FDA approval process more quickly, the agencies said.

“This is a significant bringing together of two major agencies in the government that have different but complementary roles to play in terms of speeding up treatments,” NIH director Dr. Francis Collins said in a telephone interview.

Both NIH, which conducts and funds medical research, and the FDA, which regulates some food and most drugs, fall under the Department of Health and Human Services.

“We’ve all been following the remarkable advances in biomedical sciences led by the NIH with great enthusiasm for years,” HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said in a statement.

“However, much more can be done to speed the progress from new scientific discoveries to treatments for patients. Collaboration between NIH and FDA, including support for regulatory science, will go a long way toward fostering access to the safest and most effective therapies for the American people.”

NIH often does the ground-floor research that leads to the eventual development of drugs. NIH researchers discovered that Pacific yew trees could yield a compound used to make Taxol and related cancer chemotherapy drugs, for instance.

REGULATORY NEEDS

But Collins said this research is rarely done with an eye to meeting the needs of the FDA, which must decide if a drug can be tested in people and whether, once it has, it is safe and effective.

“You can have all of that vast scientific planning in the world (but) if you have not thought carefully about the data that the regulators are going to need and the study design you should have adopted, you will just have to start over again,” Collins said.

The two agencies will establish a joint leadership council to do this.

“In addition, the NIH and the FDA will jointly issue a request for applications, making $6.75 million dollars available over three years for work in regulatory science,” they said in a joint statement.

Collins said the NIH may do more to bring drugs to market itself but will also continue to work closely with biotechnology and pharmaceutical companies. Usually, the NIH does the ground-floor work and licenses the most promising compounds to a company for further development.

Collins said he and the new FDA commissioner, Dr. Margaret Hamburg, came up with the idea soon after both were appointed by President Barack Obama.

(Editing by Cynthia Osterman)

http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE61O3VU20100225

[Via http://thewere42.wordpress.com]

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

THE PILL AND THE PLACEBO

When people talk of unlocking of the value in things, in the earth, in our homes, in the air, in our mind, they are speaking of monetisation or encashing of the demand for things, for our behaviour, rather performance, or for our attitude. We drill out coal from the earth, and thereby unlock the value in the earth. We shed our shyness, err gown, and striptease, thus monetising our attitude. We lug out our grandfather’s cot to the urban marketplace, among the wowing glitterati, and we would have encashed the admired ethnicity in the stupid rot. We arrive before the chief does and leave later, work or no work, and our behaviour converts into money. Smart folks in remote mountains offer the  ’ crisp air ‘  and are surprised by the greenbacks it rains.

The speed of this  ’ unlocking ‘  juggernaut, as it is,  would knock you senseless, wherever in the world you might be. Guess what the smart ones in business would do with the discovery of this endurance enhancing pill for males. Sure, they would commercialise it. It’s burning rubber that would choke us all. First, it would have to be on the grandest scale … volume enough to inundate the market, because anything less is non viable in view of opportunity costs. So too is delay ;  it has got to be done in the shortest span of time.

No, the rush wouldn’ t be because of a fad or obsession for super efficiency. It would be because of the huge expense base these grand and speeding corporates have from before, on which a mountain more would have piled on account of research over the years, cost of capital invested, production costs proportionate to the bulk of scale, and massive marketing and promotion expenses before income flows in.

What for ? For a pill to enable men to push on a little longer in bed ? Because it spells profit for the company and its owners ? Hundreds of millions in money, tens of thousands of employees, years of application and occupation of media resources, space and voice, to orienting people values globally to carnal needs that serve no public good ?

Apart from serving to establish such misplaced and warped priorities in public arena world wide, likely social and ethical problems arise when money bags buy their stiffness and strut about like confident studs, rich in psychological capital compared to those who cannot afford the astronomically priced pill. What does one announce in public space to promote such inequity, and how, without triggering a social collapse ? What happens with our women, some privileged with abundant sexual gratification while others deficient look upon their men with shame, criticism, moan or protest ? How do these two females, rather class of women, watch the same advertisement for the miracle pill without reflecting upon this deeply meaningful difference in their sexual well being ? And, the men, some with new found power and the despondent rest ?

$      $

The placebo has been a cause for intense rivalry for a long time now between the big allopathy pharma mainstream and alternate medical systems, especially in respect of antidepressants, one of the most prescribed medications globally. Double blind studies have revealed a relatively small difference, 18 to 25 %, between manufactured ‘ drugs ‘ and dummy pills, not all of the differential effect positively attributable to the former. A provocative headline in the Washington Post, in 2002,  said it all : Against Depression, a Sugar Pill Is Hard to Beat !

The fact is : antidepressants like Prozac, Paxil and Zoloft work. And so do sugar pills. Thank God, for the poor of the world. The fierce opposition from the mainstream lobbyists is understandable. But why should our governments be partial to them ?

Suddenly, the debate is no longer about people interests and welfare, the likes of us. It is about this nexus that big money has established globally between the rich and the powerful, leaving commoners high and dry !

In this debate, the real spotlight is on mind versus matter, the psychology of physical well being.

[Via http://vamadevananda.wordpress.com]

A crass prediction.

My husband and I were discussing an acquaintance who was recently diagnosed with a chronic disease.  The specifics aren’t important but he commented that we seem to be hearing about more people having more diseases.  I replied, “everyone has something.”

It’s true.  We will probably each be diagnosed with at least one chronic health condition if not more.  Part of this is the modern desire to label everything.  In the past, people just accepted the aches and pains of aging with little complaint unless they grew debilitating.  Now we can and do detect more symptoms and diagnose more disease and prescribe more treatments.

“Rare” diseases will most likely become increasingly less rare in the future.  Why?  Natural selection is being circumvented by modern medicine.  Most diseases have a genetic component; at the very least, a genetic predisposition to develop a given disease.  In the past, detrimental traits would affect the “success” of an individual with the disease.  Biological “success” means that an organism survives to reproduce and pass on its genetic material.  Today almost everyone survives to reproduce.  Bad disease?  We’ll fix it.  Infertility?  We’ll fix it.  Disease which causes early death?  Bank your eggs/sperm and your spouse can use them after your death.  Can’t take care of yourself?  You can still have children which the government will support.

Yep.  I’ve been called crass.

[Via http://becausenooneasked.com]

Monday, February 22, 2010

More Medical Mayhem!

It’s a really good thing I’m such a med geek.  Otherwise, I don’t think a so-called “normal” person would be able to handle this anymore.  And that’s what I told her: “I’m a med geek.”  Her, being my new Instructor for, this, my next course.  The continuing “Med Mayhem” is now crossing over to school, and not just remaining within the confines of my own body.

However, before we move on to that, the ongoing, ever painful (literally, not just for you reading), saga of my body.  When I went to bed last night after taking my meds, I was suddenly teleported back several years ago.  Back to the time when I became so sick with my gastro problems in the first place (which has nothing to do with my URI that I have right now!)  What was it? Extreme gastroenteritis and then immediate diarrhea.  Where did this come from?! This hasn’t been a Sx. at all over the past three weeks! I have a Upper Respiratory Infection!!!

I was up for about two hours waiting for the pain to end, but also fearing going to sleep, lest I shit the bed in the night! I have done this before being so gravely ill.  And obviously, I am not ashamed to admit it.  People, we are talking about medicine here.  There is no need to be ashamed of our bodies–in any realm.  HA! Although, a lot of the times we are anyway.  I know.  It’s hard.  It sucks.

Waking up, I was still a disaster in the morning. I could only handle a few sips of water until I got home.  I have now had some noodles and broth.  We’ll see, but so far so good? YIKES!

EDIT: All okay.  Have now moved on to frozen yoghurt to see if lactose is the culprit.

School.  Oh, dear! Mayhem, indeed! But I love our new Instructor! If I can announce to her that I’m a med geek right on the first day? Well, that says it all! However, I was a little bit worried as I was running late due to a transit delay.  I had called but still, first impressions? Also, a large part of Clinic Rotation is punctuality!!! I’m not joking.  It’s being taken into account for our marks.

I arrived about five minutes or so behind.  I opened the door.  They were talking about the Female Reproductive System, and I only heard something about a fertilized egg, a fallopian tube and the word “not.” Then she asked: “What is likely to happen? What would that be called?” There was silence.  I dropped my rucksack and while taking off my coat, blurted out: “Ectopic pregnancy.”  She just looked at me and said, “Right!”

Yes, I am a dork.  In case you did not know that already.

As I sat down, one of the other girls who is positively nuts called out: “Ohhh, yeah! You go, PA!” I started to laugh as it was pretty funny, I guess.  I shot her a smile, yet because I’m so sick, I probably looked more like a narcoleptic, crackhead who had Bell’s Palsy (but who did just tell the funniest joke on the planet!)

Everything is completely up in the air, with this class.  We should have learned things we haven’t.  Clinic is not sorted or settled yet (and it’s going to start on Friday.)  I’m sick with some deadly who-knows-what, so I’ll be in whatever protective gear required (gloves, gowns, masks.)  That’s fine.  I used to work in an HIV/AIDS Hospice so I’m used to the procedures.  We still have to get out scrubs ordered.  Yep! You read that right!

W00t! A great, big one, too! PA gets to wear scrubs in Clinic!!! …Scrubs Slut…Scrubs Slut… *laughing*

God, what else? I’m sure there’s more as this was only the first day.  The poor woman was running back and forth, trying to get things confirmed and then changing things up, down, back and then forth…  She now has to overhaul our entire lessons.  Unreal.  She is great though and said that we’ll all make it through.  No matter what! Hey, as long as I make it through…in one piece? That’s all I want right about now.

[Via http://patientanonymous.wordpress.com]

Friday, February 19, 2010

10 new tracks - 40+ minutes of music...

Ahhh, the illuminating light coming off the giant iMac screen can mean only one thing… drum tracking is wrapped for Feb!  I really went into this month skeptical if I could do 2 back to back at all without having them sound like copies of each other, I hope I made that achievement.  Drums sound fantastic this time around, messed with the placement of the overhead mic and used my old Pearl Piccolo snare (13″) this time.  Adds nice crack and some interesting reverberations from the room.  Also, I think I did a much better job compressing the bass drum this time.. but only my car stereo can know for sure.

I’ll spend the rest of this weekend finishing up the bass and guitar and try to save the whole final week for vocal.  February is a short month and I didn’t realize how much those extra 2 or 3 days help!

www.holisticmedicineproject.com

[Via http://wonderguy24.wordpress.com]

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Arthritis Doctors in St. Luke's Global

AZ asked for physician referrals in St. Luke’s Global City, for

her arthritis, which she said was acting up due to the weather.  Ortho KB referred us to the head Dr. Canlas, and also Drs. Tabera and Tanchuling.

Photo taken on January 21, 2010, when I consulted my endo, Dr. Joy Fontanilla.

I went up the escalator, to see my endo at the Endocrine Center

A pianist was playing when I was there. Like it.

DSdR, also our SLG referror, asked me why I was taking photos.

Didn't occur to me then that I would be using these photos. :)

I told Dr. Fontanilla that it was so relaxing there, now that there are still no clinics.

When I went to St. Luke’s Global, a maintenance guy told me that I should see the huge suite.  He offered to take my photo.  I agreed.  I complained to him and to Dr. D that there are only four ladies’ cubicles on the ground floor, that there should be like twenty when the place goes full-blast.

The Endocrine Center charged me

P 200+ facilitation fee, that’s aside from the doctor’s professional fee.  My endo would not charge me at Medical City, where she used to be based.  When I went to St. Luke’s Global, I had a driver.  I think that it’s too far now, that I’ll probably switch endos just because of the distance, to my parents’ endo, Dr. Ruby Go, at Cardinal Santos Medical Center.  Also, I can keep an eye on my parents’ health that way.  I had stuck with Dr. Fontanilla because she’s just so nice and easy to talk with.  Aside from her curing/alleviating my hyperthyroidism.  Her secretary, Bernadeth, is extra-friendly without being presumptious.  A perfect team that I would have a hard time finding elsewhere.

I got two texts from the Endocrine Center yesterday, asking me if I was still showing up for my appointment with Dr. Fontanilla, which I forgot!  One of the texters, Thierry, texted in dizzying mixed case.

Efren tells me that St. Luke’s Global will only have fine dining facilities, no lower-end food places.  Does anyone have any confirmed info on this?

One Cardinal doctor complained that the accredited contractors were charging P 350,000 to P 700,000 for labor, and that when her clinic was supposedly ready for turnover, that the flooring was not yet done, and that her door was made of plywood, not solid wood as stipulated in her contract. Maybe this is what another doctor from St. Luke’s Medical Center-Quezon City meant when she said that the St. Luke’s Global contract is one-sided.

All roads seem to lead to Bonifacio Global City these days, with the move of PhilPlans and Philhealth Care, Inc. from the Philamlife Bldg. on United Nations Avenue. Incidentally, isn’t Philhealth confusing with the government entity?

General Milling has also moved from Makati to Bonifacio Global City, around last year.

My friend in General Milling, MF’s sis E also works in Bonifacio Global City. E used to work in Makati.

My clients who live there are related to each other.  One used to be based in the US.

[Via http://sanjuanmakati.wordpress.com]

Monday, February 15, 2010

Faith in cheese

Lindsey Vonn after winning the Downhill World ... Image via Wikipedia

When you think about it, we all have folk remedies that we might use when we have a cold, a bug bite, a bee sting and the like. We all have heard of castor oil, witch hazel and mustard plasters. We continue to use them because we are convinced that they work. Whether that faith comes from the opinion of a much loved relative – such as a grandmother – or medical science, we do it because we have faith that it will help us.

Such is the case with Olympic skier Lindsey Vonn and cheese. According to an article in CNN Health, Vonn has been wrapping her injured shin in cheese. Austrian cheese to be exact, Topfen. According to Vonn her trainer began doing this and she believes that it helps.

The article explains that sometimes it is not the method utilized for these home remedies that work, but rather the faith that the person receiving the remedy places in the remedy itself. Basically, the power of positive thinking.

The internet is replete with various home remedies and reasons why they work. The most important reason why they seem to work is that the recipient believes that it will work. The power  of faith – even if it is faith in cheese.

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  • Lindsey Vonn Using Cheese, Painkillers For Injured Shin (huffingtonpost.com)
  • Skier spreads cheese on leg to heal injury (cnn.com)
  • Painful injury could cloud Vonn’s Olympic dream (olympics.thestar.com)
  • Vonn using painkillers, cheese to treat shin (seattletimes.nwsource.com)
  • Lindsey Vonn Shin Update: Vonn To Train Thursday (huffingtonpost.com)
Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

[Via http://tammyheff.wordpress.com]

Arslankuyruğu kalp, tiroit

BİTKİLERLE MODERN TEDAVİ

Dr. Ahmet Toptaş

 

ARSLANKUYRUĞU

(Leonurus cardiaca L.)

 

         Alman resmi gazetesinde 13.03.1986 tarihinde yayınlanarak ( Heftnummer:50) modern tıbbi tedavide kullanılmaya başlanmıştır.

Bitki: Anadolu ve Avrupa’da suni gübre kullanılmayan bölgelerde kolaylıkla yetişen çok yıllık bir bitkidir. Boyu 1-1,5 m yüksekliğindedir. Yaprakları saplı, 5-7 derin dişli, her iki yüzeyi kısa, sık tüylerle kaplıdır. Haziran – ağustos ayları arasında çiçeklenir, çiçekleri pembe, açık kırmızı veya koyu kırmızı renklidir.

İlaç etkili kısmı: Çiçeklenme döneminde toplanıp kurutulmuş toprak üstü kısımlarının tamamıdır. Bitki alkaloidler (stachydrin, betonicin), flavanoidler, acı madde glikosidleri, bufenolid ve % 5-9 tanen ihtiva eder.

Etkisi: Kalp çarpma sayısını hafif azaltır (negativ chronotrop), kan basıncını hafif düşürür ve sakinleştirici (sedativ) etkisi vardır.

Kullanıldığı yerler: Sinirsel kalp rahatsızlıklarında kullanılır. Tiroit bezinin aşırı çalışmasına bağlı kalp şikayetlerinde de destekleyici ve koruyucu olarak uygulanır.

Kullanılmaması gereken haller: Yok.

İstenmeyen Etkileri: Yok.

İlaçlarla uyumsuzluğu: Yok.

Kullanım miktarı: Ortalama günlük kullanım miktarı 4,5 gr kurutulmuş aslankuyruğu otudur.

Kullanım şekli: Hazır ilaç veya çay olarak kullanılır. İnce kıyılmış 1-2 çay kaşığı aslankuyruğu otu üzerine kaynar su (150 ml) ilave edilerek 10 dakika demlenir, süzülür, tatlandırmadan içilir. 2-4 hafta boyunca günde 2-3 defa çayı belirtildiği gibi hazırlanarak içilebilir. Çay soğuk da hazırlanabilir. Aslankuyruğu otu yukarıda verilen ölçülerde soğuk su içinde 12-24 saat bekletilir, süzüldükten sonra ılıtılarak tatlandırmadan içilebilir.

Kullanım süresi: 2-4 hafta.

Kaynak:

Alman Kanunlarına Göre

Düzenlenip İzin Verilen

BİTKİLERLE MODERN TEDAVİ

Pratik Uygulamalar

Dr. Ahmet Toptaş

Gonca Yayınevi, İstanbul 2009

ISBN: 978-9944-790-31-4

0212 5285076-5286005

[Via http://w2q3.wordpress.com]

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

St John (NZ) CPR iPhone/iPod Touch app

As important as knowing how to perform CPR (cardiopulmonary resuscitation) is, many people either gradually forget what they have learned about performing CPR, or they can go blank when faced with a sudden emergency situation.  If you own a iPhone or an iPod Touch then the CPR (cardiopulmonary resuscitation) app by St John (NZ) is an absolute must have.  Although it’s an excellent CPR guide in an emergency (even provides a periodic beep to help you time the chest pumps), it’s obviously not a substitute for proper First Aid training.

Other interesting links:

  • St John Every Day Hero – has interactive tests with scenarios
  • First Aid Tips

[Image source: itunes.apple.com]

[Via http://childoftheocean.wordpress.com]

Monday, February 8, 2010

Post-op 2 & 3

The second day went pretty well. I didn’t really have any problems. In the first 24hrs I wasn’t supposed to spit so I was wondering how to do wudhu. Just took a little bit of water each time and tried to let it out by simply opening my mouth. And swallowed the rest. Then I tried to keep my wudhu for the rest of the day. I didn’t want the clot dislodging and getting a dry socket (a complication of the procedure which results in severe pain). In order to prevent your muscles from stiffening up, you have to keep opening and closing your mouth. It was pretty easy the 2nd day but for some reason it became harder the 3rd day and today. It needs a few tries before I can open my mouth fully. And I feel a little click in my jaw when I do. Hope that smooths out.

I had some mild discomfort yesterday but not much of a problem. I’m on antibiotics so not that worried but it just feels a little weird. I wonder if it’s the stitches. I still can’t make out how many there are. They look like a clump with maybe a little bit of blood clot there too which I can taste every now and then.

Good thing is fasting is usually pretty easy for me so not eating a lot of food isn’t too bad. Day 2 I had ice cream, peach, very small pieces of an apple and at night, cool daal soup since I am not allowed hot things. Day 3, I had muttar paneer, peach, half a banana, raita, yogurt, and biryani. I’m actually enjoying the variety. :P

So, until I have to go back to that dentist and get my stitches removed (which should normally be painless but I don’t seem to trust him at all at this point), all iz well. :P

[Via http://hijabfiles.wordpress.com]

Friday, February 5, 2010

Pharma eMarketing Roundup 020510

It’s that time again – a quick collection of links of interest for pharma marketers who are tracking the eMarketing and Social Media space. Here we go:

What’s the Point of Health 2.0? (Path of the Blue Eye project), in which Fard Johnmar expands on Susannah Fox’s thoughts. Also, for the same blog – What Good is Social Media Transparency?

The Seven (soon to be Nine) Uses of Social Media in Business. From the thoughtful and prolific Jon Richman.

New web 2.0 site from Hungary: ScienceRoll

Social Media Forums and the Pharma Industry, from eyeforpharma.

Fascinating data from Silja Chouquet on Pharma Twittersphere – who’s following you? (Part 1 and Part 2). WhyDot Pharma blog.

The Pixels and Pills folks have rolled out a neat tool called The Health Tweeder. Here’s a review from Andrew Spong. Pixels and Pills, by the way, will be sponsoring a Tweetup in Philly this coming Monday evening in conjunction with the ePharmaSummit.

My take – Apple’s iPad and eHealth – game changer? You can see a variety of other perspectives over on KevinMD’s blog.

———-

Subscribe to the Impactiviti blog via e-mail (which will bring you Impactiviti Daily – a brief of the day’s top pharma news)

Sign up for the Impactiviti Connection twice-monthly e-newsletter (see sample)

Connect with Steve Woodruff

[Via http://impactiviti.wordpress.com]

this i do not love

February is the month of love. But now I have a cold. And it sucks. I thought I was going to make it through the whole year without getting sick. I did all the right things: vitamin C, iron, tea, fruit, exercise, water; it was all to no avail. Sickness got the best of me. Did I mention that it sucks? On average, you will get over a cold in a week if you take medicine, it’ll take about seven days if you don’t. That is a joke, in case you didn’t catch it. Don’t catch colds, though. They suck. I’m going to go the no medicine (besides tea, ricola, and water) route because I’m poor and don’t have the money to spend on medicine, plus I prefer not to put extra chemicals in my body. Spicy food and chai tea clear the sinuses pretty well, anyway. I think I should get some rest.

[Via http://fauxswissmiss.wordpress.com]

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

So I Did Seize After All!

I now know this because I am post-“ick”tal©.  Although, I didn’t know this when I woke up.  Nor did I know (for sure?) if I seized last night.  Or, even if I had a nocturnal seizure.  I’ll get to that.  Due to being post-“ick”tal©, I’m quite cognitively impaired, plus I have taken some Gravol/Dimenhydrinate for my nausea.  Therefore, I am circling some planet in our solar system (not sure which one), so this blog post may be incredibly confusing, filled with grammatical errors, be lacking in cohesiveness, so on and so forth!

Okay, what happened–and what’s ticking me off about it.  My seizure patterns and manifestations seem to, or may have changed a bit.  Any Simple Partial stuff seems to be really vague, and then take forever to lead up to anything else.  Now, this could appear as a good thing: my Anticonvulsants are doing a good job of keeping things under wraps.  However, with me having Epilepsy and multiple types of seizures, if a Simple Partial is going to lead to another type, I want it to hurry up! Let’s have it over and done with!

On the way home last night.  More vague and prolonged Simple Partial crap and not a lot of it.  That’s what made it hard to tell what was happening.  Epigastric rising, DP/DR off and on, but definitely altered consciousness.  A bit of rapid eye blinking and blurred vision? However, when immediately post-“ick”tal©, what a headache! Ocular induced? Ocular area! Not a migraine as it went away eventually.

This morning.  I never know where I am when I get up first thing, anyway.  However, as the morning progressed, something’s not right here.  Initially, some mild cognitive impairment? But my legs.  I’m being more clumsy than usual! A lovely woman even offered up her seat to me on transit as I was stumbling around so much.  I politely declined.  All of this made me think: nocturnal motor seizure? No.  Now I just think it’s because I’m sick.

I arrive at school.  Oh, bloody hell! Nausea, definite cognitive impairment, headache.  The Instructor (who is a nurse and knows all of my head nuttiness), took one look at me and was WTF??? I knew I must have looked like zombie that was about to slip into a coma at any moment.  I told her I thought I was post-“ick”tal©.  She asked me if I wanted to go home.  I told her, no.  I said it was nothing and that I had been laid up in bed sick for 72 hours before!

Kind of funny in class with the other students, though.  They were all, “…post-“ick”tal©…what’s that…?” I desperately wanted to launch into a huge “Seizure Speech,” but we were busy doing other things–like schoolwork?

Had to pick up some scripts on the way home and finally remembered to buy my damn anti-nauseants that I keep running out of! I guess actually being sick while in store prompted me to do it? I have a nice, big stash now.  However, even after taking some, I’m still nauseous.  Oh, well.  They’re doping me up quite nicely, so even though I’m nauseous I can still sit here and feel like I’m completely stoned.  My head is hurting, though.  Photophobia, too (why am I on my computer…?) Phonophobia a bit (I am sitting in silence…)  The psychiatric disturbances are probably there as always–I’m just too zoned out to tell?  I do feel anxious, though.  Yes.

ASIDE: For those that don’t already know, when people with Epilepsy have pre-existing or comorbid psychiatric conditions, their/some psychiatric features can manifest when post-“ick”tal©.  I get depressed and anxious.

I think this whole post is really kind of stupid or pointless, maybe.  I don’t know.  I guess sometimes the posts may be of interest, or useful.  I always write about my seizures here to document them ASAP as I may not get around to putting them into my “Dossier.”

[Via http://patientanonymous.wordpress.com]

Lancet Retracts Statement that Vaccines cause Autism

(CNN) — The medical journal The Lancet on Tuesday retracted a controversial 1998 paper that linked the measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine to autism.

The study subsequently had been discredited, and last week, the lead author, Dr. Andrew Wakefield, was found to have acted unethically in conducting the research.

The General Medical Council, which oversees doctors in Britain, said that “there was a biased selection of patients in The Lancet paper” and that his “conduct in this regard was dishonest and irresponsible.”

The panel found that Wakefield subjected some children in the study to various invasive medical procedures such as colonoscopies and MRI scans. He also paid children at his son’s birthday party to have blood drawn for research purposes, an act that “showed a callous disregard” for the “distress and pain” of the children, the panel said.

After the council’s findings last week, The Lancet retracted the study and released this statement.

“It has become clear that several elements of the 1998 paper by Wakefield et al. are incorrect, contrary to the findings of an earlier investigation. In particular, the claims in the original paper that children were ‘consecutively referred’ and that investigations were ‘approved’ by the local ethics committee have been proven to be false. Therefore we fully retract this paper from the published record.”

-from CNN

What a great day for science, kids’ welfare, and parents.

[Via http://annaboh.wordpress.com]

Friday, January 29, 2010

Poem/story-"Acts of love" by M. Detelj

Below is a poem/story to be performed at my next opening. Enjoy.

_______________________

“Acts of love”

Act I. The Past

I’ve held this hand too many a time to count, but you still look at me in your despondence and start to pout.

What am I? Who am I? Did I give you hope? I didn’t mean to ruin what love we had with moments in which I never spoke!

But it’s okay, you’ve learned your lesson. And whether or not you believe it, this isn’t depressing. This is success, a heart, it’s beating so loud. It beats for you, who too far are lost in the crowd. You need to open your eyes, see the beauty of the world, you need to understand the world doesn’t revolve around little boys and girls. There’s so much more out there, so much more than this. This is high school romanticism; something you wish you wouldn’t miss. Because four years from now, when you look back…if you mature like I did…you’ll find there is nothing to laugh at besides the silly faces, and the little notes. The slang language and hearts you broke. Your life is nothing when you stay so hidden, so secure not knowing how to live and…think! Think of where I am! Think of what I’ve done! Yeah I wear my badges and polish so they catch a reflection of the sun. Let it hit your eyes because there’s nothing more golden than understanding it could be your hand I am holding.

Act II. The Present

I have a gift, I’ve only given once.

The gift is “meaning” behind every touch.

I’ve bypassed my lust and sexual desires for something and someone I believe to be of higher power; “It’s you,” I whisper in her ear. “It’s you,” as I begin to tremble in fear. It’s been too long long since I’ve felt this insecure…it’s been so long. And now we are stumbling it seems ever so fast, but as long as we wish for love, the troubles cannot last…no…no the troubles, they will not last.

Act III. The Future

We’re climbing high now, there is nothing to hold us back. We are above the financial ruin and even years later, together we still smile. The love is there! The love is there! The love is there!

I’ve dreamt too long of this day and the time I spend with you is inevitable. We are a colossus and there is nothing above us. There are no troubles but our health as we continue to grow old, your hand still in mine and our lashes touching. The fear of death isn’t scary…no we aren’t scared.

Act IV. The End

It’s this hospital bed that makes death grim…but with you by my side…my side by you…it makes no difference.

We lived.

We Loved.

We Cared.

-Mike Detelj 2010

[Via http://mdetelj.wordpress.com]

Mission to Haiti: Dr. Jeff Mjaanes' Blog - First Day Treating Patients

Thursday, January 28, 9:39 p.m. Haitian time -

Our first day out in the field is over! We split into several smaller groups today:

1) The anesthesia group went to the General Hospital and worked in the OR with several teams from other countries.

2) A group of internists went to a clinic across the street from Adventist Hospital and saw about 170 patients.

3) A group went to the refugee camp and saw about 250 patients. Most of what we treated were infections, minor fractures and abdominal pain – mostly from people who have had minimal water and food for several days.

To get to our spot in the refugee camp, we had to cross the city. The damage from the earthquake (or as the Haitians call it “the event”) is truly astounding. We passed the school where 400 children died – three floors simply pancaked onto each other. We saw block after block of collapsed buildings, houses, shopping centers, supermarkets, etc. Every park is occupied by people living in makeshift tents made of sheets – we may be going to one of these the day after tomorrow. The devastation is simply catastrophic and very sobering.

Tomorrow, we will be going to similar sites – and our orthopedic and vascular teams will be splitting up to operate.

Overall, it was a challenging but rewarding day. More to follow…
Jeff

Haitian children

[Via http://rushnews.wordpress.com]

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Advocacy and The Act of Out

Without question, this blog missive is not the first to be written regarding advocacy, mental illness and how out any of us are.  However, I’m going to bring it up again, based upon it happening to me (again.)

We wrote an exam in class today–which I totally forgot about, as I was too panicky in reading a new chapter last night.  I was even more panicky this morning, as public transit was royally screwed.  Like many of us, Aspie/AD(H)D spazzes, sticking to our rituals schedules, is extremely important!!! Not that I have control over things like public transit, but still!

So, we wrote the exam and I was talking to one of the other girls in the class.  We were comparing marks.  She scored a big-bang 100%! Yay, her! W00t! Wee PA? Despite her panicky, forgetful, winginess? 93%.  Now, I’m not looking for kudos, here.  I don’t care.  What this leads up to, is our discussion of just exactly why I need to be so, very careful regarding our exams.

I told her that I have Dysgraphia. I have mentioned this many times on my blog, but for those of you who don’t know what it is, I’ve tossed the Wiki link up again. She asked me what it was. Here we go!!!

I explained it to her (short and sweet, I can’t write well, messy, screw up my letters and numbers, reverse them, miss letters and then misspell things…)  Therefore, that is why I need to really pay attention with our tests, and why I still get things wrong when I damn well know the right answer! I told her that it is very common with people who are on the Autistic Spectrum and who have AD(H)D.  I then told her I have Asperger’s and ADD!

The girl said that she thought she had Dysgraphia too! The Instructor is a Nurse and blurted out: “What do you know about the Autistic Spectrum? Have you been diagnosed by a Doctor?” I just about killed myself laughing.

Some more questions ensued, and then I made my standard joke about my Medic-Alert Bracelet–that it’s amazing they could engrave everything that’s “wrong” with me on it.  She wanted to see it.  I said I have Bipolar as well, and Epilepsy.  I stopped there.  I mean, really.  Why keep going? However, you can obviously see that I am quite the “advocate” and quite “out?” I always have been, but I “advocate” in my own way.

I’m not one for soapboxes.  I don’t even think I am on my blog, but I may have to rely upon my readers to give me some insight on that one.  In terms of a “not-so-soapy-box,” like public speaking for an Advocacy Group? No.  I’ve never done that, but I could.  I just haven’t chosen that route.  I advocate in a more simple manner.  Basically how I did today.  I speak to people individually, or in a pair, a group of a few.  I just talk to them, “as me.”

And you know what? I’ve found it unbelievably powerful.  So many times, the people on the other end are wonderfully receptive.  They ask probing questions, they may have someone they know with mental health issues, and the ones that really make me happy? They’re the folks that actually have mental health issues themselves!

As soon as I open up, they slowly start to do the: “…well…eh…uh…I…erm…”  Do you know how awesome that is? I don’t probe.  I just sit and listen.  Who knows if these people have told anyone else before but me?! The last thing I would want to do is freak them out!

So.  Anyone else? Want to talk about how you “advocate?” How “out” you are?

[Via http://patientanonymous.wordpress.com]

But isn't evolution 'only' a theory?

Not in medicine as an applied science; it is a basic and necessary understanding.

A recent series of article in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) discusses the role of evolutionary biology in modern medicine. The authors collectively make a forceful point – medicine is an applied science. It is based upon a number of basic sciences, and one of those basic sciences is evolution.

Many examples in medicine provide a compelling case that evolutionary principles are important to understanding populations, genetics, infectious disease, diet, and other issues of public health – in diagnosis, treatment, and research. Therefore, the authors argue, evolution is an important topic for medical professionals to understand .

Increasing the basic science standards for medical students can only help the goals of science-based medicine, and I am glad to see that evolutionary biology is being recognized as the core basic science that it is.

From Steve’s post Evolution in Medicine at Science-Based Medicine

[Via http://questionablemotives.wordpress.com]

Monday, January 25, 2010

X-Ray Department and Laboratory Area in Free Medical Camp at Manav parivar in Matar

Good morning friends,

Yesterday was a busy day again in Free Medical Camp at Manav Parivar in Matar.  As always expected, lots of patient visited.  They were checked and given a proper medicine.

Patients in X-Ray Department at Manav Parivar

This picture is the X-Ray Department in Manav Parivar.  All the patients who needed X-ray were lead to this laboratory area.   The patients were brought to this area for all possible laboratory test which was prescribed by the volunteer doctors.

 

Volunteers iinside the Laboratory Area at Manav Parivar

 This was the volunteers at Manav Parav which was assigned to the X-ray Department.  After some testing done by them, they were checking the result.  As you can see the second picture was a volunteer doctor.  A pathologist.  He was checking the report on Semi-Auto Analyzer Machine.

Manav Parivar   has a complete medical facilities and enough supplies.

[Via http://volunteering4all.wordpress.com]

Hazımsızlık bitkilerle tedavi ediliyor

BİTKİLERLE MODERN TEDAVİ

Dr. Ahmet Toptaş

 

HAZIMSIZLIK

         Hazımsızlık karın bölgesinin üst kısmında ağrı, erken doyma, şişkinlik, gaz, bulantı, yanma şikayetleriyle ortaya çıkar. Aynı zamanda ishal ve kabızlık görülebilir, üzüntü ve sıkıntı ile şikayetler artar.

         Hastalığın nedenleri arasında barsak tembelliği, ülser, gastrit, sindirim salgılarının yetersizliği, barsak hareketlerinin yavaşlığı, stres sayılabilir.

         Hazımsızlık şikayetlerinde kullanılan çok az sayıda kimyasal-sentetik ilaç bulunmaktadır, öncelikle bitkiler kullanılmalıdır.

         Bitkisel ilaçların etkileri hafif, istenmeyen ( Yan, zararlı) etkileri çok az, etki çeşitliliği fazla ve tedavi alanı geniştir. Tahammülü kolay olduğu için hastalar tarafından da tercih edilmektedir.

         Sinirsel esaslı şikayetlerde sakinleştirici bitkilerin ( Kediotu kökü, şerbetçiotu çiçeği, lavanta ve bunların karışımı) desteği sağlanmalıdır.

         Tedaviye destek olarak içki ve sigara içilmemeli, fazla yağlı yenmemeli, meyve-sebze ağırlıklı beslenmeye özen gösterilmeli, lokmalar iyice çiğnenmelidir.

         Hazımsızlık şikayetlerinde çok sayıda bitki ve bunların karışımları kullanılabilmektedir. Burada bunlardan bazıları belirtilmektedir. Bitki esansları ( Eterik yağ) ülkemizde ilaç kalitesinde kontrollü olarak henüz üretilmediği için kullanım şekilleri açıklanmamıştır.

Çay karışımı ( Fixe kombination):

Anason tohumu              30 gr

Frenk kimyonu tohumu   60 gr

Rezene tohumu               60 gr

Tohum karışımı kullanılmadan hemen önce dövülmeli veya öğütülmelidir.

1 çay kaşığı karışım fincana konur, üzerine 150 ml kaynar su ilave edilir, ağzı kapalı olarak 10 dakika demlenir, süzülür. Çayı taze hazırlanarak yemeklerden sonra içilir.

Karışım sindirimi hızlandırır, gaz ve kramp giderici etki gösterir.

Hekim tavsiyesi olmadan 2 haftadan uzun süre kullanılmamalıdır ( Karışımda rezene bulunduğu için).

Çay karışımı ( Fixe kombination):

Nane yaprağı                  50 gr

Frenk kimyonu tohumu   25 gr

1 yemek kaşığı karışım kullanmadan hemen önce dövülür, fincana konur, üzerine 150 ml kaynar su ilave edilir, ağzı kapalı olarak 10 dakika demlenir, süzülür. Çayı taze hazırlanarak yemeklerden sonra içilir.

Bu karışım gaz, şişkinlik ve mide-barsak bölgesindeki hafif kramplarda kullanılır.

Çay karışımı ( Fixe kombination):

Nane yaprağı                  25 gr

Frenk kimyonu tohumu   25 gr

Rezene tohumu               25 gr

1 yemek kaşığı karışım kullanımdan hemen önce dövülür veya öğütülerek fincana konur, üzerine 150 ml kaynar su ilave edilir, ağzı kapalı olarak 10 dakika demlenir, süzülür. Çayı taze hazırlanarak yemeklerden sonra içilir.

Bu karışım (rezene nedeniyle) hekim tavsiyesi olmadan 2 haftadan uzun süre kullanılmamalıdır.

Çay karışımı ( Fixe kombination):

Karahindiba kökü ve otu 50 gr

Nane yaprağı                  25 gr

Enginar yaprağı              25 gr

Bitki kısımları kıyılarak karıştırılır ve cam kavanozda muhafaza edilir.

1 yemek kaşığı karışım fincana konur, üzerine 150 ml kaynar su ilave edilir, ağzı kapalı olarak 10 dakika demlenir, süzülür. Çayı taze hazırlanarak yemeklerden sonra içilir.

Bu karışım özellikle safra yollarının normal çalışmamasına bağlı olarak görülen karın boşluğunun üst kısmındaki kramplarda kullanılır.

Kaynaklar:

1-     Dr. Ahmet Toptaş, Alman kanunlarına göre düzenlenip izin verilen BİTKİLERLE MODERN TEDAVİ, Gonca Yayınevi, İstanbul 2009, ISBN: 978-9944-790-31-4, (0212) 5285076-5286005.

2-     Dr. Ahmet Toptaş, ÇÖREKOTU Tepeden tırnağa şifa deryası, Gonca Yayınevi, İstanbul 2008, ISBN: 978-9944-62-613-2, (0212) 5285076-5286005.

[Via http://w2q3.wordpress.com]