It’s finished!






Previous posts on this quilt:
Word Play Quilting
Animal Names Word Quilt – WIP
I am a plastic surgeon in Little Rock, AR. I used to "suture for a living", I continue "to live to sew". These days most of my sewing is piecing quilts. I love the patterns and interplay of the fabric color. I would like to explore writing about medical/surgical topics as well as sewing/quilting topics. I will do my best to make sure both are represented accurately as I share with both colleagues and the general public.
I previewed some of the word blocks for this quilt earlier. I have now completed the piecing. Here’s how the top looks. Now I have to do the quilting.
Here you can see the bear and camel blocks.
Here is the elephant hiding out in the “n”
Here is the gator in the “a”
It turns out that the classic red heart symbol we see almost everywhere around Valentine's Day doesn't look much like a real human heart at all."Of all the theories about where that symbol comes from, my favorite is that it is a representation of a sixth century B.C. aphrodisiac from northern Africa," says Stephen Amidon,….. "And I kind of like that history because it sort of suggests that early on, people sort of understood the connection between love and the heart."
On this edition of WIHI, Dr. Chen wants to spend some time talking about language, especially the words doctors use with one another when describing patients; the unintended barriers created the more doctors and nurses don protective, infection-protecting garb; the mounting weight of patient satisfaction surveys; and more.
"One of the things that surprised me during the course of writing this book was how durable the heart's metaphorical power has been — not just in the past 50 years in the great explosion of cardiology, but in the past 500 years since the great anatomists of the Renaissance began opening up bodies and began looking at the physical heart," he says.Even as all this was happening, the heart has retained its metaphorical power."So perhaps there will be a day when we no longer touch our chest and kind of nod, and people understand we're talking about qualities that can't be explained by medicine — we're talking about courage or devotion or inspiration," he says. "You can have a situation where someone receives an artificial heart, and afterward goes to their surgeon and says, 'I thank you for this from the bottom of my heart.' This will make complete sense to us."
Welcome to Grand Rounds: the Impact of Healthcare Reform. For this edition of Grand Rounds, Vol. 7 No. 11, we’re focusing on the impact of healthcare reform: what are the changes to healthcare delivery, utilization, quality, costs (either as a provider or a patient) and outcomes. After all, these changes affect everyone, whether you’re a patient, a healthcare provider or a biomedical researcher.……..
My ossicles shiver at the sound of your nameThat’s the first verse, go read the rest.
My cochlea swirls at the sound of your voice
I get symptomatic labyrynthitis when I see your beauty
And my world becomes vertiginous when you enter it
People often assume women gravitate to certain professional fields because they have an innate liking for the work. Women become pediatricians because they love babies, for example, or they become veterinarians because they love animals.So why are women flocking to colon and rectal surgery as an occupation of choice? ………….
The American Medical Association had a press release on November 22nd and announced findings from their survey on the impact of insurance company preauthorization policies. Surprisingly, they discovered that these policies use physician time and delay treatment. It's funny, because preauthorization policies were designed to save money. And I imagine they do, for the insurer, but they cost money for everyone else. ………..
Wow, these are lovely but I don’t think my relatives would like to have their food served on them. H/T Street Anatomy. (photo credit).……………………………………….
Have you come across a pleonasm somewhere? How about making up your own examples of pleonasm? Send us your pleonasms, whether homegrown or captured in the wild (include a picture, if possible). The best entry will receive a copy of the word game WildWords (courtesy WildWords Game Company) and a runner-up will receive a copy of the word game One Up! (courtesy Uppityshirts).
When: December 11, 2010 11am-1pmWhere: Museum of Discovery @ 500 President Clinton AvenueWhy: Meet other bloggers and help decide future activities/goals for AWBWe will keep you updated with event details as we pull them together.To RSVP, you can leave a comment on this post. If you're on Facebook, you can RSVP and invite friends at the event page. You can also RSVP by emailing us at arkansasbloggers@gmail.com.
My first word quilt was the “Hope quilt” I did for Intueri to make a quilt to help her raise money for Multiple Sclerosis Society. I ventured into word quilts after finding Lazy Gal Quilting blog. Earlier this summer, I began playing around with piecing words that have to do with the eye. I would twitter photos as I made the word blocks. Turned out to be fortuitous as I somehow (even being careful to check myself) misspelled ophthalmology.
MaryMillsRN caught the mistake and was kind enough to let me know. It would have been horrible to have completed the quilt and then discovered the misspelling.
@rlbates Do you want me to tell you that ophthalmology is misspelled?
It is machine pieced and measures 50.5 in X 68 in. I have basted it and am machine quilting it.
Here is a close view to see some of the fabrics and words.
Here is one of my 20/20 (vision). I am happy with how it is turning out.
Have just seen a cosmetic surgery press release about so-called "Speedo Sag"....Ew
Many of the men that want to get the Tummy Tuck, aka “Speedo sag” surgery, have lost weight or started a fitness plan and are looking for a surgery that can remove pockets of fat or loose flaps of skin from their stomach.
MEANING:It hit me as I was writing this that the facial muscle – risorius – who’s function is to retract the angle of the mouth to produce a smile has the same etymology.
adjective:
1. Laughable; ludicrous.
2. Disposed to laugh.
3. Relating to laughter.
ETYMOLOGY:
From Latin risus, past participle of ridere (to laugh). Other words that share the same root are ridiculous, deride, rident, and riant.
MEANING:
noun:
1. Nonsense; foolishness.
2. A trifle; gewgaw.
ETYMOLOGY:
From a nonsense refrain in some old songs. The word is also spelled as falderal.
A is for Abdomen, Aorta, Appendix
B is for Bones, Brain, Breast
C is for Clavicle, Colon, Cornea
D is for Dermatomes, Diaphragm, Duodenum
E is for Ear, Epiglottis, Esophagus
F is for Face, Femur, Fibula
G is for Gallbladder, Ganglion, Glands
H is for Hand, Heart, Hip, Hyoid
I is for Ileum, Intestines, Iris
J is for Jaw, Joint, Jugular
K is for Kidney, Knee
L is for Ligament, Lip, Liver, Lung
M is for Mandible, Mouth, Muscles
N is for Nerves, Nipple, Nose
O is for Omentum, Orbit, Ovary
P is for Palate, Pancreas, Pelvis, Prostate
Q is for Quadriceps Muscle
R is for Radius, Rectum, Ribs
S is for Scalp, Spleen, Spine, Stomach
T is for Tendon, Thyroid, Tongue, Trachea
U is for Ulna, Umbilicus, Ureter, Uterus
V is for Vagina, Veins, Ventricle, Vertebra
W is for Wing (of sphenoid bone), Wrist
X is for Xyphoid
Y is for Y-chromosome
Z is for Zygoma
If you seek for wealth you have mistaken your avocation. There must be something more, and something higher. That something is a love of your profession; a passion for science for its own sake; a broad humanity, which covers all the sick with a mantle of charity. Never lose sight of that motive, for if it once takes flight, your profession is reduced to a trade, and there is absolutely nothing left. As long as you can keep alive the sacred flame of this early passion which first called you to embrace the medical
profession, so long shall you be warmed, sustained, upheld amid disappointment, unjust treatment or reverses."