Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Shout Outs

Updated 3/2017-- photos and all links (except to my own posts) removed as many no longer active. 

Dr. Elaine Schattner, Medical Lessons, is the host for this week’s Grand Rounds. You can read this week’s virtual tour edition here (photo credit).
Live, from New York, it’s med-​​blog Grand Rounds, volume 7, number 43!
As I’m staying home for the summer, I’ve asked bloggers to share images of where they’re from, or where they go, so we could take a virtual tour together:
We’ll start with a post from the Wash­ington, DC-​​based Pre­pared Patient Forum, where Jessie Gruman clar­ifies that Engagement Does Not Mean Com­pliance. As Jessie says, “I am com­pliant if I do what my doctor tells me to do. I am engaged, on the other hand, when I actively par­tic­ipate in the process of solving my health problems.”  ……….
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Peggy, TBTAM, has a great post on How to Save Money on Birth Control (photo credit)
If you live in New Hampshire, or some other state that is withdrawing Planned Parenthood funding, you may need to find an alternate source of affordable birth control, at least until the states get their heads screwed back on straight. In the meantime, please, don’t stop your birth control because you think you can’t afford it - the costs of not using it are much, much higher…………
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H/T to @KaveyF for this tweet “Good god! RT @52Betty: Wow, this gallery of past tampon ads is fascinating...the one with the dangling fish....really?? http://is.gd/EHrNht?”
And, yes, I’m old enough to have used sanitary belts.  (photo credit)
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Robert W. West, Jr., PhD wrote an guest blog post for KevinMD:  Female physicians on Twitter
I delivered a keynote presentation a few weeks ago entitled “Personalized Medicine: Tailoring Healthcare in the Information Age” to a group of parents who had taken their kids to the Bristol-Myers Squibb Science Horizons summer science camp. ………….
That said, below is a list of female docs who are currently engaged in social media, at least via Twitter, and in many instances, through other social media channels, including blogs. In each case their respective Twitter handle is provided for easy reference (often, additional information, such as a blog link, can be obtained by visiting the respective Twitter page).  …...  The order shown provides no indication of either personal or professional qualification.…….
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H/T to @masseyeandear for the link to EyeWorld Mobi’s interview of Dr. Claes Dohlman by Dr. Bonnie An Henderson:  CATARACT -- Innovations and advice from Claes Dohlman, M.D. (photo credit)
This month's cover feature is on femtosecond laser refractive cataract surgery. This new technology has the potential of dramatically changing the manner in which cataract surgery is performed. How are such innovative ideas developed? Many ophthalmologists may have a new idea for an instrument but do not know how to pursue the idea. I interviewed Claes Dohlman, M.D., professor of ophthalmology, Harvard Medical School, and chair emeritus, Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, Boston, who pioneered numerous innovations in cataract and corneal surgery, including a well-functioning keratoprosthesis. He shared some advice on how to take an idea and develop it into a product. . …..
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An article in the July edition of Plastic Surgery Practice outlines the smart phone apps related to plastic surgery:  There Are a Lot of Apps for That (by Wendy Lewis)
Apps rule the world of smartphones, and the world of plastic surgery has certainly taken notice and jumped on this trend. ……
Most of the apps designed for consumers range from free to $1.99 to download to an iPhone, iPod Touch, or iPad, but some tools designed for surgeons may run into the hundreds of dollars.   ……….
This growing category of apps gives prospective aesthetic patients a lot of information. One might argue that some of these apps give patients too much information, such as the ability to digitally morph photos of their faces and bodies into a desired state of perfection that may not be physically possible even using a scalpel or syringe.
Now, in no particular order .…..
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Chimecco Kinetic Sculpture (photo credit)
Chimecco is an interactive instrument and kinetic sculpture by artist, architect, and designer Mark Nixon, which was recently exhibited at Sculpture by the Sea in Aarhus Denmark …..

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Shout Outs

Updated 3/2017-- photos and all links (except to my own posts) removed as many no longer active. 

Grand Rounds is  taking a break this week. If you would like to host a future edition of Grand Rounds send an email to Nick Genes (you can find his contact info at here).   The most recent edition can be found here at Medgadget.  Other editions can be found here on the Grand Rounds Facebook page.
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@movinmeat  wrote a post recently, A case study in applied ethics, which lead @inwhiteink to write an educational post on decisional capacity
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“Decisional capacity” refers to a person’s ability to make a decision for a specific clinical issue. This issue is usually related to treatment. After assessment, physicians can opine whether someone possesses or lacks decisional capacity for something specific: ……
Appelbaum and Grisso published an important paper that provides a four-point rubric to assess decisional capacity. (At only four pages, it is a short, high-yield article.) Most psychiatrists apply this rubric when assessing decisional capacity in medical settings. …….
Movin Meat’s followup post:  Ethics of refusing informed consent
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From twitter:   @Mtnmd The Twitter chat that killed Sermo http://bit.ly/ipw4au
Her link is to an article by Joe Hage which I encourage you to read:  The Twitter Chat that Killed Sermo | #MedDevice
I’m not a physician. I don’t play one on TV. And I’d never heard of Sermo, the largest online physician community in the US (boasting 120,000 members) until @HJLuks mentioned them the week before.
Mine was an innocent invitation to talk during last night’s #MedDevice chat (Thursdays, 8 pm EST).
Who knew it could unravel the company.  …….
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Yesterday NPR aired this story:  Army Nurse Helps Soldiers Heal From Burn Wounds
As part of NPR's ongoing series, 'The Impact of War,' guest host Allison Keyes explores one of the tragic consequences of combat - burn wounds. Such wounds can subject victims to a painful and unpredictable recovery. Army Lt. Col. Maria Serio Melvin shares her experiences at the military's largest burn center, the Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio, TX, where she treated service members injured in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars …………
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Some inspiring stories of healthcare workers during the Joplin tornado
H/T @Mtnmd -- 45 Seconds: Memoirs of an ER Doctor from May 22, 2011
H/T @SeaSpray – Operating Through the Tornado
James D. "Dusty" Smith, MD, and his surgical team were midway through a routine case, the draining of a patient's infected hip, when the tornado hit St. John's Regional Medical Center in Joplin, Mo., Sunday.  ……….
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From @scutmonkey, her piece on Psychology Today:  The Radical Notion that Doctors are People, Too
Though there are few subjects as immediate to my experience as that described in Gardiner Harris's article in The New York Times, "More Doctors Say No to Endless Workdays," (April 1st, 2011), perhaps the truest indication of my opinion on the matter may be the fact that, upon first glance at the headline, I didn't feel much need to read the rest of the article.  More doctors say no to endless workdays?  Well, of course we do.  Duh.  …..
Her tweet of the article led @DarrellWhite to tweet a link to his view on the same topic:  Residency Training and the Modern Physician
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H/T to @brainpicker and @ctsinclair for the link to this:  Anatomy made of LEGO (photo credit) 
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Last Tuesday (May 24, 2011) NPR celebrated Bob Dylan Turning 70.  Near the top of the story written by Linda Fahey is a button “Visit FolkAlley.com To Hear The Mix” which links you to a wonderful mix of Dylan music sung by Joan Baez, Tim O'Brien, Rosanne Cash, Jimmy Lafave, many others — and Dylan himself.  Thanks NPR.
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Threads has a nice article by Susan Khalje on Creating Perfect Bias Fabric Loops  (photo credit)
……..we decided that loops and buttons would be a cleaner alternative.
Here are a few samples to show you what we did:
We started with strips of bias-cut fabric, making a sample or two to determine just how narrow we wanted the finished loops to be. ……….

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Shout Outs

Updated 3/2017-- photos/videos and all links (except to my own posts) removed as many no longer active. 

Prepared Patient Forum, What it Takes is the host for this week’s issue of Grand Rounds! You can read this week’s edition here. 
We received more than 40 contributions for this week’s collection of health care blogs and columns. Patients, clinicians, policy wonks and interesting folks with opinions submitted original posts that are sure to expand your thinking and perspectives. …..
On Calling the Shots, Beth Gainer takes issue with using terms such as “sexy” and “sassy” to describe the experience of having breast cancer.  As a breast cancer survivor, Beth understands the reality of the diagnosis, treatment and aftermath that left her feeling anything but sexy or sassy.
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Paul Levy, Not Running a hospital, on health care policy:  The Whac-A-Mole school of health care policy
Boy, if you ever needed a summary of how messed up our health care system is, check out this story by Robert Pear in the New York Times. Entitled, "Nursing Homes Seek Exemptions From Health Law," the essence is that nursing homes want to be exempt from the employer requirement to provide health care benefits to their staff because the payments nursing homes get from Medicare and Medicaid to deliver care to patients are too low to provide enough cash to those institutions to offer those benefits. …..
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A lovely post on humanity by Jordan, In My Humble Opinion:   I'm Coming Home
As the door opened the look on her face was undeniable. Grief. Pain. the tears rolled down her eyes. She let me into her small dorm room and hugged me. And then she told me that her grandmother was dead.
She was a mess. Her sadness was overwhelming. She sat on her bed in a stupor. And I sat with her. Holding her hand. Not saying a word. Just being…..
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Dr. Smak writes about what grief has taught her:  Reflections
………….Last week our moderator asked us to reflect on how we have changed, what we have learned, from our experience as a bereaved parent. There were several things mentioned, and much overlap as expected. These stood out for me:   …….
3. Finally, what I'm still struggling to learn: life goes on. Not his life, but everyone else's. …. As one father put it, "My other children are still growing up." …... I don't want to miss out twice. And I don't want her to miss out on having a present mom.
Being a bereaved parent hasn't made me a better person, but I'm different than I was.
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Shared on twitter (photo credit) by @dwescott1
RT @pbaniak: I must say, these photos are pretty cool: Rare albino robin spotted in Winchester: http://bit.ly/lqiLd5 cc: @GrrlScientist
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Brought to my attention via @MotherinMed and @enochchoi: Magic of the MD-patient relationship NYT: Our Health and the Luck of the Draw
Sometimes you hear stories from your patients that leave you staggered by the caprice of life. A young West African patient told me how his extended family had trudged through the forest on foot to escape rebels. He was 10 years old at the time. At one point in the journey, he had to urinate. He excused himself and retreated several feet into the bush. Moments later shots rang out. When he finally had the courage to crawl back out onto the path, he saw that his entire family had been killed in an ambush. …….
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I feel even more fortunate to have never been sued as I read the statistic “6 in 10 doctors are sued by the time they reach age 55, said a 2010 report by the American Medical Association.” This comes from the AmedNews article by Alicia Gallegos: Life after lawsuit: How doctors pick up the pieces
Before dawn, nearly every morning in the days leading to his trial, Stephen Lutz, MD, woke abruptly, his mind filled with thoughts of the looming witness stand.
He would spend the next few hours lying in the darkness, going over the case again and again.
"I awakened many mornings rehearsing what I would say to explain myself. It's almost as if I was giving testimony every morning at 4 a.m.," said Dr. Lutz, a radiation oncologist in Ohio who was sued in 2008.
Experts say such stress associated with a medical liability lawsuit manifests in different ways, often affecting all aspects of a physician's life. ……
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How cool would it be to go to a concert and be invited on stage?  Well, NPR tells the story of just that happening to Rayna at a Paul Simon concert:  Paul Simon And A Moment Of Pure Sobbing Joy
Paul Simon has brought joy to so many for so long, but on this night he made Rayna Ford's dream come true. During a show in Toronto on May 7, Rayna Ford, a fan from Newfoundland, called out for Simon to play "Duncan," and said something to the effect that she learned to play guitar on the song. In a moment of astonishment and disbelief, Paul Simon invited her on stage…...

Sunday, May 1, 2011

Beautiful

Updated 3/2017-- video and all links (except to my own posts) removed as many no longer active. 

American Idol covered Carol King's songs this past week. Haley Reinhart did “Beautiful.”  The words are a reminder of a simple way to be beautiful.
You've got to get up every morning with a smile on your face
And show the world all the love in your heart
Then people gonna treat you better
You're gonna find, yes, you will
That you're beautiful as you feel …..
Carol King puts it much more beautifully than the essay by Robert Tornambe, M.D.: What Makes a Person Ugly?
Here is Carol King singing “Beautiful” live. Enjoy

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Repost: Focal Dystonia of the Hand

Updated 3/2017-- photos and all links (except to my own posts) removed as many are no longer active and it was easier than checking each one.

Earlier this week I caught bits and pieced of Diane Rehms interview of pianist Leon Fleisher. She was interviewing him about his many musical careers and his memoir: My Nine Lives: A Memoir of Many Careers in Music.
So I thought I would repost my blog post from October 2007 on Focal Dystonia of the Hand.
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Earlier this week I read an article in Reader's Digest (November 2007 Issue) on Leon Fleisher and his focal dystonia of his right hand. The article is written by Oliver Sacks, MD and is a exert from his book "Musicophilia: Tales of Music and the Brain". I wanted to review what I knew about focal dystonia and ended up learning much. I would like to try to share this with you. Enjoy this "Ravel Piano Concerto for the Left Hand 1/2" played by Leon Fleisher.


The term dystonia collectively refers to a heterogeneous group of movement disorders characterized by sustained involuntary muscle contractions that result from co-contracting antagonistic muscles and overflow into extraneous muscles. Focal dystonias are adult-onset forms that affect a specific area of the body, ie hand, neck, vocal cords. Most focal dystonias are primary. By primary it is meant that the dystonia is the only neurological symptom.
Focal hand and limb dystonia usually begins as a painless loss of muscular control in highly practiced movements. A genetic predisposition is thought to occur in less than 5% of all cases of focal dystonia. There are many professions that require repeated and intricate hand movements. However, focal hand dystonia is more common in musicians than any other group of professionals, including dentists, surgeons, and writers. This disorder is often referred to in medical literature as occupational cramps (ie, “violinist’s cramp”, “pianist’s cramp”, "writer's cramp"). (photo credit)
Cause
There is no one isolated cause of hand and limb dystonia. A variety of pathological conditions may lead to similar symptoms. As a child develops, he/she learns many different movements (such as walking, writing, or playing an instrument) that are stored in the brain as motor programs. Instances of hand dystonia that are highly task-specific have been described as a “computer virus” or “hard drive crash” in the sensory motor programs that are essential for playing music. However, additional factors, such as a genetic predisposition, are likely to play a significant role in the development of such a sensory-motor dysfunction. Why this “computer virus” cannot be easily overcome by establishing a new and improved sensory-movement pattern remains an important question for researchers.
Symptoms
Most affected persons describe symptoms in terms of their occupation terms. A musician may notice
  • Subtle loss of control in fast passages
  • Lack of precision
  • Curling of fingers
  • Fingers “sticking” to keys
  • Involuntary flexion of bowing thumb in strings
A writer may notice:
  • Deterioration in neatness or speed of writing or just clumsiness
  • A cramp or aching in the hand on writing
  • May report that the hand freezes up on attempting to write
  • Difficulty in moving the pen across the page
A tremor may or may not be associated with the spasms. In most cases, the dystonia is present only in the context of specific tasks (and may be very specific to one instrument--a clarinet but not a saxophone). The dystonia may appear extremely sensitive to sensory input: a pianist may experience symptoms while playing on ivory keys but not while playing on plastic keys. Sometimes the modification of posture and even facial expressions may affect dystonic spasms in the hand.
Physical Exam
Inspection
No special examinations are described for focal dystonia other than inspect the patient performing his task.
  • The pen commonly is held very tightly, with an exaggeration of the normal semiflexed posture of thumb, index and other fingers, and with hyperextension of the distal interphalangeal joint of the index finger. Occasionally, the hand suddenly stops and the paper is perforated, or it might dart across the page with a sudden jerk. The script produced is usually abnormal. Tremor is a common finding in all forms of writer’s cramp but it is usually not severe. (photo credit)
  • Examination of the musician while playing reveals non-physiologic posture and gestures in most of the patients. Sometimes it is possible to identify involuntary dysfunction such as flexion, curling in one or two fingers, or involuntary extension of the “sticking fingers”. These may be difficult to detect, even with slow motion video.
The remainder of physical examination is often normal, but subtle findings can be noted in some patients: dystonic postures of the affected limb when the patients sit or walk, or loss of arm swing of the affected side during the gait.
Palpation
There is minimal unilateral increase in muscle tone in some patients. There are no other abnormal findings.
Quantification
The Fahn-Marsden scale was designed to quantify generalized or focal dystonia and can be found here.
Electromyography
Electromyography studies show prolonged duration of muscle bursts with superimposed shorter, repeated bursts of activity. The pattern is of complete lack of selectivity for individual muscles with overflow of contraction to muscles not normally activated by the task being performed. Electromyography may also useful as a guide to botulinum toxin injections.
X-rays
Radiographs are not useful in the assessment of focal dystonia. Occasionally, in an appropriate setting, magnetic resonance image of the brain can be useful to rule out a cerebrovascular disease.
Treatment
There is no cure for dystonia at this time, and although treatment of the disorder may be challenging, there are several available options. The different causes of hand dystonia may warrant different treatments. Don't give up--see Leon Fleisher's story.
Oral medications: There are a number of therapeutic agents with clear beneficial effects to writer’s cramp, including anticholinergics, clonazepam and benzodiazepines. High dosage of anticholinergic drugs is firstly recommended for the treatment of dystonia.
  • Doses recommended of biperiden are 2 mg per oral two or three times a day and titration to 16 mg a day.
  • Diazepam is another choice. However, it is rarely adequate when used as sole agent. Doses are 10mg per oral two or three times a day.
  • Clonazepam can be useful for improvement of phasic symptoms in cases with myoclonus and/or tremor. Doses are 0.25 mg per oral twice a day, increasing to 0.125 to 0.25 mg every three days up to a dose of 4 mg/day.
Botulinum toxin injections has been used for the treatment of writer’s cramp with good results. Its application requires careful and precise technique. The selection of the muscle should be based on careful physical examination while the patient writes or plays in order to trigger the dystonic movements. The injection should be carried out under EMG guidance with a hollow recording needle and the botulinum toxin is injected through the same needle. Small volume injections into multiple sites are preferred to a single large injection. Dose per muscle varies from 2.5-25 units. Initially, only few muscles are injected. The dose per muscle and number of muscles injected are optimized (based on response) for subsequent injections.
Splints
Some patients find that finger-splinting device made individually according to their symptoms help improve their ability to write or to play a musical instrument. Limb immobilization for four weeks and a half is a simple and sometimes effective treatment for this condition. (photo credit)
"Therapeutic approaches involving the practice of movements are likely to remain unsuccessful unless their design includes a framework that, in principle, aims at interrupting this vicious circle. Indeed, a recently developed behavioural therapy, termed sensory motor retuning, holds great promise (Candia et al., 2002Go). Musicians with focal hand dystonia performed repetitive movements with fingers of their dystonic hand while one or more fingers except the dystonic ones were immobilized. After therapy, movements of the dystonic fingers were substantially better controlled, with some musicians reaching near-normal performance levels. Along with improvement of motor behaviour, the topography of the somatosensory representation of the fingers became normalized." from Brain article (see references below).
For an interesting list of people who have struggled with this problem, check here.
References and Resources
Mark Hallett, MD
NIH clinical study "A Training Protocol for the use of Botulinum Toxin in the Treatment of Neurological Disorders", reference No. 85-N-0195
Focal Dystonia of the Hand by Marcos Sanmartin
Focal hand dystonia – a disorder of neuroplasticity?; Brain, Vol. 126, No. 12, 2571-2572, December 2003; Joseph Classen
Upper Limb Disorders in Musicians by Raoul Tubiana, MD
Tubiana R. Musician’s focal dystonia. Hand Clin 19: 303-308, 2003.
Dystonia Fact Sheet--National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
Dystonia--pianomap
Focal Dystonia from a Guitarist's Perspective by Jarrod Smerk
A Tale of Two Hands--Charlie Rose talks to pianist Leon Fleisher
Muscians with Dystonia Foundation

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Shout Outs

 Updated 3/2017-- videos/photos and all links (except to my own posts) removed as many are no longer active and it was easier than checking each one.

Notes from Spice Island is the host for this week’s Grand Rounds! You can read this week’s edition here.
Welcome to this Edition of Grand Rounds. I'm honored to be hosting for my first time. The topic is education and lessons learned. I hope you enjoy!  ……….
Don't forget to check out Grand Round next week with a special election themed edition, Dr. Wes is hosting. Enjoy your Tuesday!
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While this Better Health article by Barbara Ficarra, RN focuses on cancer prevention news article, the same tips can be of help with any medical news articles:  Cancer Prevention: How To Sift Through The Headlines
Most of us can’t keep up with all the new ways to avoid cancer. Thanks to the Internet, we now have an unlimited supply of cancer knowledge at our fingertips. But, how can we filter out the good, the bad and the questionable?
Below are steps to help you tease out the facts when reading that next big news story on preventing cancer.
Says who?
Don’t just take the writer’s word for it. Dig a little deeper to find out the source behind the hype. The American Cancer Society says you should ask yourself these questions when reading an article:  ………….
Knowing the answers to these questions can help you decide on where you need to go to seek more details about the study findings. Visit the source of the information to learn more about how this new substance or method was tested.  ………..
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From twitter: RT @doctorwes: Electronic era part of problem? RT @AbbieCitron RT @Lawcats RT @MatthewBrowning: Missed Nursing Care- http://bit.ly/b5fEj2
The article, Missed nursing care: View from the hospital bed (Part One), is by  Beatrice J. Kalisch
Health care providers often assume they know what inpatients are experiencing. How different the view is from the hospital bed. Suddenly, the paradigm is flipped. Insights gained about hospital care from that vantage point can be quite astounding and must be examined if inpatient care is to improve. It is toward this end that I share my experience as an inpatient for seven days in an acute-care U.S. hospital. I was out of town and a longtime friend took me to the emergency department (ED).   …………….
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Via twitter: @ milblogging Military Blogs
U.S. Navy releases Social Media Handbook (View Online) http://tinyurl.com/2v6w37o
Navy Command Social Media Handbook - Online VersionView more documents from US Navy Social Media.………………..

I like NPR, Elton John, and Leon Russell which made this segment NPR did last week very enjoyable for me:  Elton John And Leon Russell Reunite On 'The Union'

Elton John and Leon Russell's paths seemed fated to cross: Both grew up at the piano, learning to play as little boys. Both played piano in bars while in their teens, and both started their careers as piano players for hire. But, according to John, there's one important difference.

"He is a better piano player than I am," John says. "As far as gospel and stuff like that, that's why I wanted to make this album. He is my idol."   ……
And this one:  First Listen: Elton John And Leon Russell, 'The Union' which gives you the opportunity to listen to some of the songs on the album.
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Dr Anonymous’ show will be about FMEC Mtg. The show begins at 9 pm EST.


Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Shout Outs

 Updated 3/2017-- photos and all links (except to my own posts) removed as many are no longer active and it was easier than checking each one.

Pallimed.org is the host for this week’s  Grand Rounds.  You can read this week’s edition here.
I am not sure if Nick(@blogborygmi) realized this when he approached me about a date to host, but this is the last edition of Grand Rounds for Volume 6.  A hospice blog as final chapter to a great year of medical blogging, there are things in life that are more serendipitous than this of course.  But of course here at Pallimed (@pallimed), we do cover things beyond just the last few days of life. So feel free to take a look at our 1,000 other posts.
On to the best of the medical blogosphere!  No themes here but I did ask (like GruntDoc) to include a post of  other than your submission to help broaden our reach this week…….
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Kim, Emergiblog, is the host of the latest edition of Change of Shift (Vol 5, No 6) which is in its 5th year!   You can find the schedule and the COS archives at Emergiblog. (photo credit)
I can’t believe two weeks has passed already, but the calendar says that, indeed, it is time for the latest edition of Change of Shift!
Quite the eclectic collection of stories this week!
Before you begin, I just want to remind everyone that I still have discount codes available for BlogWorld/New Media Expo 2010. We’ll be getting together in Vegas next month! Check the button on the top bar for details.  I’d love to meet as many nurse bloggers as possible!
And now, I am proud to present……..
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Great Diane Rehm Show this past Thursday on Thalidomide and the FDA
Fifty years ago, a newly appointed medical officer at the FDA stood up to corporate pressure and refused to approve thalidomide, the drug already used for morning sickness in other parts of the world. The case transformed how Americans think about medicine and the FDA's drug-testing policy. Diane and guests explore how thalidomide is being used today and discuss how Frances Kathleen Oldham Kelsey saved thousands of babies from the perils of thalidomide.
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Orac has written a thoughtful response to the New York Time story  by Amy Harmon:    New Drugs Stir Debate on Rules of Clinical Trials.  His post is titled:  Balancing scientific rigor versus patient good in clinical trials
A critical aspect of both evidence-based medicine (EBM) and science-based medicine (SBM) is the randomized clinical trial. …..
The ethics of clinical trials, however, demand a characteristic known as clinical equipoise. Stated briefly, for purposes of clinical trials, clinical equipoise demands that there be a state of genuine scientific uncertainty in the medical community over which of the drugs or treatments being tested is more efficacious and safer……
In oncology clinical trials, as in clinical trials for treatments of any life-threatening disease, there is always a tension between wanting the "cleanest" possible results versus doing the best for each individual patient. It is a balancing act that relies on the ethics of physicians and a combination of hope and altruism in the patients who become subjects in such trials. … How to maximize the good for as many patients as possible is the goal, but, as we have seen, this is a goal that is not so easily accomplished, just as clinical equipoise is a concept that is easy stated but not so easily applied. PLX4032 teaches us that.
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This is worth reading (and listening to):  New York Times article by The Voices of Schizophrenia by Tara Parker-Pope (photo credit)
Few mental illnesses are as complex and confusing as schizophrenia, a mental disorder in which people may experience hallucinations or delusions, hear voices or have confused thinking and behavior.
Although the word “schizophrenia” means “split mind,” the disorder does not cause a split personality, as is commonly believed.
The latest Patient Voices segment by Karen Barrow, a Web producer, offers rare insights into schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder, a related condition that combines thinking and mood problems, as seven men and women share their experiences.  ………….
To hear these and other stories of schizophrenia, click on the Patient Voices audio link. And then please join the discussion below.
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I love Jimi Hendrix’ music, so really enjoyed this piece on NPR last week:   Send My Love To Linda: An Untold Jimi Hendrix Story
January 16th, 1970.
The greatest rock guitarist to ever play the instrument, Jimi Hendrix, has eight months and two days to live. He spends part of the day at New York City's Record Plant laying down some tracks. After a few busted takes, Jimi launches into one of the most amazing instrumentals that few people have ever heard.
Hendrix called the piece "Sending My Love to Linda," and ……. Despite being a Hendrix fan, I had to go back and find out more about who this Linda was……….
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Dr Anonymous show this week will be a follow-up school name change & value of alumni.   The show begins at 9 pm EST.

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Medicine and Music

Updated 3/2017 -- all links (except to my own posts) removed as many no longer active. 

Thanks to the PSP Blog which linked to the Culture Map article by By Douglas Newman --  Medical jams: From plastic surgery to cancer to sex changes, it's been rocked about.
Newman has put together the following list with audio links included in his article.  I hope you will pop over and give them a listen.  Do you have any to add to the list? 
"Heart Doctor" by Lee "Scratch" Perry
This late period track by the legendary (and legendarily kooky) Lee "Scratch" Perry finds the reggae/dub artist and producer doling out "advice" to his patients. ….
"A Nurse's Life is Full of Woe" by Billy Bragg
An unreleased track taken from the sessions of Talking With the Taxman About Poetry, "A Nurse's Life is Full of Woe" finds Bragg taking on the plight of the working class,…...

"Plastic Surgery" by Maps of Africa
You can't have a medical themed songlist without a nod to the vain, and there's no better ode to plastic surgery than this psychedelic thumper by Maps of Africa. Granted, it seems as if things have gone horribly wrong for this patient: "I used to be a person/but I've turned into a version/of my plastic surgery."

"Still Ill" by The Smiths
If you know anything about Morrissey you know that the illness in question is undoubtedly an ailment of the heart. And by heart, I don't mean clogged arteries. As is true with almost any song by The Smiths, there are multiple interpretations of "Still Ill."………..Depression? Knowing Morrissey I would say that's a safe bet.

"Call the Doctor" by J.J. Cale
Such a smooth groove, this track from J.J. Cale's 1971 debut finds the laid back bluesman ravaged after a particularly rough night of loving: "A shady lady took all my bread/Ravished my body, lord, and messed with my head/I don't know but I've had my fill/Call the doctor and tell him I'm ill/"

"I Tried to Stay Healthy For You" by Palace Brothers
Like the rest of the Palace Brother's mysterious debut, "I Tried to Stay Healthy For You" sounds like it was recorded in Appalachia during the early part of the 20th century. ……….
The lyrics, seemingly written from the point of view of an aging coalminer are equally ancient and haunting, "Sing to them all and I'll stand by/Though jealousy it threatens/Smoke's around my blackened lungs/It is my only weapon."

"Cure for Pain" by Morphine

"Sick Bed Blues" by Skip James
…… "Oh Lordy, Lord, Lord, Lord/I been so badly misused/An treated just like a dog."
"Cancer" by Joe Jackson
Jackson laments that everything give you cancer and that's no cure and there's no answer. ….

"Acute Schizophrenia Paranoia Blues" by The Kinks

"Hospital" by The Lemonheads

"Lady Godiva's Operation" by The Velvet Underground
"Lady Godiva's Operation" is a terrifying account of a sex-change operation …...
"Love Sick" by Bob Dylan

A few I can think of might include
“Doctor My Eyes” –  Jackson Brown
Bad Case Of Loving You (Doctor, Doctor Give Me The news) – Robert Palmer
Addicted to Love – Robert Palmer
Bad Medicine – Bon Jovi
Disease – Matchbox Twenty
Fever – Elvis Presley

Friday, March 21, 2008

Five Feet High and Rising

Updated 3/2017-- video and all links removed as many no longer active as it was easier than checking each one.


Due to the recent rains, there has been some serious flooding around the country. Here in Arkansas, the Black River crested on Thursday at 29.7 ft, 15.7 ft above flood stage at Black Rock. The White River was expected to crest today at 27 ft, 12 ft above flood stage at Batesville; and at 32 ft, 16 ft above flood stage at Newport.
You may recall that Johnny Cash was from Arkansas. This song (Three Feet High and Rising) of his seems appropriate. Enjoy (hopefully on dry land).

There is an amazing gallery of photos here that includes the one below of all the cows seeking high ground.