Showing posts with label grand rounds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label grand rounds. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Shout Outs

Updated 3/2017--all links removed as many no longer active.

Dr. Rob (@doc_rob), More Musings (of a Distractible Kind), is the host for this week’s Grand Rounds. You can read this week’s Grand Rounds Vol 8 No 25: Super Tuesday Edition here.
Welcome to grand rounds, the best around the world of medical blogging! 
For those expecting a silly recitation of today’s posts in rhyme, this post will let you down.  But don’t be sad, as I have provided with an alternate version of grand rounds on my other blog, Llamaricks, which (if you hadn’t guessed) is not quite as dedicated to the serious side of things. 
Since today is “Super Tuesday” ……
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Check out Doctor David’s (@david65) blog for as he put it on twitter:  the “story I won't forget. Watch the video -- the look on my patient's face says it all.”  The post:  Music Can Heal
Well, maybe music can't cure cancer, but it can certainly heal the spirit.
Drew Seeley released a new song today that he wrote for my patient.
Watch the video here……
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H/T to @tbtam who tweeted this: “ The Before. Sad, beautifully written , perfectly told. We docs have all been there. . jama.ama-assn.org/content/307/9/… (Need JAMA subscript).  The link is to an essay by Jennifer Frank, MD:  The Before
This is the before. A moment suspended like a bubble floating on a warm summer breeze gently but inevitably toward the ground. I feel the pop coming, an implosion of the very center of your life. Anticipating what this moment would hold, I nevertheless hoped for something different. To be able to eagerly dial your number and shout out the good news to you in a breathless rush. It's not what we thought. It's not cancer.
Instead I take a deep breath, pressing each number slowly, cautiously, drawing out the moment before the burst…………….
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Go read Elaine’s (was @medicallessons, now @elaineschattner) new post:  Harsh Words, and Women’s Health at Risk
I’ll open with a confession –
Women’s health has never really been at the heart of ML. Your author has, his­tor­i­cally, rel­e­gated sub­jects like normal men­stru­ation, healthy preg­nancy and repro­duction and natural menopause to her gyne­col­ogist friends. Sure, I learned about the facts of life. I even studied them in med school and answered ques­tions, some cor­rectly, along the way. By now, I’ve lived through these real life-​​phases directly. But these topics never drew me. That’s changed now.
Women’s care – and lives, in effect – are jeop­ar­dized on three fronts:……………..

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Shout Outs

Updated 3/2017--photos and all links removed as many no longer active. 

Paul Ware, Life with Huntington's, is (suppose to be) the host for this week’s Grand Rounds. You can read this week’s edition here.
Next week’s host is Dr. Rob (@doc_rob): What’s Grand and Round and Comes in an RSS Feed?
……To submit your GR post for next week’s GR, fill out the attached submission form. I must have submissions in before Sunday, March 4th at 6 PM EST……
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H/T to @jilltomlinson who asks.
Was this 27yo man's life lost in ill-conceived race to perform "World 1st" surgery? bit.ly/x2bGEJ #retrospectoscope
The link is to this Mai lOnline article: Man, 27, who had world's first quadruple limb transplant dies days after operation.
A 27-year-old Turkish man who underwent the world's first would-be quadruple limb transplant died yesterday, hours after the limbs were removed due to metabolic failure, the hospital said…….
I thought it was too risky when I first heard about the transplant prior to them having to later remove the limbs. We are certainly pushing the limits with transplants these days with double hand, face, multiple organ, etc.
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From Letters of Notes a letter that gives a glimpse of breast Cancer in 1855. This woman had surgery with no pain meds: 'Deep Sickness Seized Me"
In September of 1855, Lucy Thurston — a 60-year-old missionary who had been living in Hawaii with her husband since 1820 — underwent a mastectomy after being diagnosed with breast cancer. Incredibly, she somehow endured the operation wide-awake, without any form of anaesthetic. She wrote the following letter to her daughter a month later and described the unimaginably harrowing experience.
The procedure was a success. Lucy Thurston lived for another 21 years………………
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From @Skepticscalpel comes a post with his take on the survey in the Archives of Surgery: Surgeons and alcohol abuse.
“Prevalence of alcohol use disorders among American surgeons” appeared in the February, 2012 issue of Archives of Surgery.
A survey of 7197 surgeons, all members of the American College of Surgeons [ACS], had a 28.7% response rate and revealed that 15.4% had scores on an alcohol use assessment test that indicated abuse of or dependence on alcohol. This is consistent with the rate of such alcohol problems in the general public…………….
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VIDEO: Kyle Dyer, 9NEWS anchor, interviews with the Denver Post
Channel 9 news morning anchor Kyle Dyer talked to the Denver Post on Wednesday, February 23, 2012, about the injuries she sustained from a dog bite and her road to recovery.……. Video by Mahala Gaylord

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H/T to @impactednurse ‏for this tweet:  “Very cool. Federico Carbajal's anatomical sculptures made with galvanized wire: bit.ly/yRSvFk”

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Shout Outs

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

Dr. Jen Dyer, Endogoddess, is hosting this week’s Grand Rounds.   You can read this week’s edition here.
I am a total news junkie and always have been (which is probably why I started out college as a journalism major before deciding that I wanted to be a doctor). So, this week's edition of Grand Rounds features the news themes of the prior week and their relationship to health: politics, football fever, the power of facebook, red heart disease awareness, and the impact of pink. ...….
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Head’s up:  @drjohnm is asking for posts for next week’s edition of Grand Rounds which he will be hosting.  Here’s his tweet:
Dear Med Bloggers: Please send me your posts for the Valentine's day version of @grandrounds http://ow.ly/8Xmze
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Updated 3/2017--photos and all links removed as many no longer active. 

Thank you @tbtam  for the information in your post:  Alternatives to Komen for Channeling Your Dollars & Energy to Fight Breast Cancer:

One option, of course, is to give to Planned Parenthood, The other option is to donate to one of the other charities on the front lines in the battle against breast cancer. Komen, after all, is not the only game in town.
Here are a few other places where your dollars will be put to good use fighting breast cancer. All of the following groups get high ratings from the American Institute of Philanthroy and/or Charity Navigator-……..
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White Coat is attempting to shine light on the issue of Amanda Trujillo: 
I finally took the time to read some other blogs today. One of the issues that I found disturbing was the case of Amanda Trujillo…………….
I’ve tweeted to Amanda to contact me …..
I’ll request the patient’s permission for release of the patient’s medical records from the hospital. ….
And I’ll get the name of the surgeon who allegedly does not take the legal doctrine of informed consent too seriously and who allegedly uses temper tantrums as a means to bully people into submission. Maybe we can look into his background a little. If he did have a “tantrum” in a patient care area, has the hospital investigated him for his conduct?
Everything will be published here.
And if ends up that Amanda was wrong for what she did I’ll publish that as well.
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A New York Times article by Melissa Greene:  Wonder Dog
In May 1999, Donnie Kanter Winokur, 43, a writer and multimedia producer, and her husband, Rabbi Harvey Winokur, 49, beheld the son of their dreams, the child infertility denied them.  ……………..“Sometime after their 3rd birthdays, our wonderful fairy tale of adopting two Russian babies began to show cracks,” said Donnie Winokur,……….
For children with autism or behavior disorders, dogs were trained in “behavior disruption.” For children with seizure disorder or diabetes or respiratory issues, dogs were trained to alert the parents at the onset of an episode, and there have been a few able to predict the medical incidents 6 to 24 hours in advance. (How they do this is something of a mystery.)…………..
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Dogs are so cool! in my humble opinion.  There’s the above story and then there’s this one I heard tonight on ABC Evening News which made me think of my three dogs who died of cancer.  I actually called a drug company way back when to see if she qualified for a drug trial.  There was no registry then.  Oh well.  Here’s the story:  Canine Cancer Studies Yield Human Insights
Some of the most promising insights into cancer are coming from pet dogs thanks to emerging studies exploring remarkable biological similarities between man and his best friend.
Cancer is the leading cause of death in dogs. Every year, millions of dogs develop lymphomas and malignancies of the bones, blood vessels, skin and breast……………….
Jack Sevey Jr. created the website MyCancerPet.com in January 2011 after his 5-year-old boxer Bull died from T-cell lymphoma. Sevey wanted to create an online community for fellow owners of cancer-stricken pets and also steer them to helpful resources. Those include lists of clinical trials compiled by several organizations: the AKC Canine Health Foundation, Animal Clinical Investigation, the National Cancer Institute's Center for Cancer Research, the Morris Animal Foundation and the Veterinary Cancer Society……………..

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Shout Outs

Updated 3/2017--all links removed as many no longer active. 

Gina (@geeners), Code Blog: Tales of a Nurse, is this week’s host of Grand Rounds. You can read this week’s twitter edition here.


How’d we get to Volume 8 already?! I think hosting this Grand Rounds finally ties me up with GruntDoc, who has hosted 7 times. Grand Rounds is the weekly round-up of blog posts by medical bloggers.

Whereas in the past the host would post nearly every link they received, it appears that we are now moving towards more curated content. I said in my previous post that I wasn’t going to institute a theme, but I was definitely more drawn to the personal-story type posts. Thanks to everyone that submitted! ……..

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Dr Rob is finally back blogging! His recent Musings Post explains: Plugging Back In.


This post is to announce two things:


  1. I am back blogging again.

  2. I am not blogging on this blog. I have a new blog called More Musings (of a Distractible Kind).

I also have a new project, Llamaricks, which is a blog that will hopefully draw audience participation. It’s a place for poetry; poetry by me and poetry submitted by my readers (assuming I have any). Hopefully there are people talented and/or shameless enough to submit their prose to me on that site.

OK, so I am already being untruthful. I really had three announcements. ……..

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There’s a nice discussion going on over at doc2doc: Poll: Should doctors self prescribe? Various opinions. Here are a few:


Probably antibiotics for infections would be ok, and something like Voltaren for artritis, or celebrex, but no controlled substances, this is where the water gets muddied.

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Doctors should not self prescribe nor under any obligation prescribe any medication for a family member or friend without their own "clinical consent" in regard to the medical condition in question.

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Generally doctors should not prescribe for themselves and any narcotic prescribing for self or family is a definite No. There is a saying that 'the doctor who treats himself has a fool for a patient' ….

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Then there’s this via @skepticscalpel: “Why internists shouldn’t operate MT @hhask @writeo After-hours surgery resulted in woman's death http://bit.ly/AA2DHL”

The link is to an article in The Oregonian by Nick Budnick: Oregon Medical Board sheds light on cosmetic surgery by Northeast Portland doctor that led to woman's death


For botching an after-hours cosmetic surgery that caused her friend's death, a Northeast Portland physician faces administrative charges and could lose her license.
Soraya Abbassian committed "gross or repeated" negligence while performing the Dec. 15, 2010 surgery, including administering what an autopsy found to be a fatal overdose of local anesthesia, according to a disciplinary complaint issued by the Oregon Medical Board on Thursday. ……….

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H/T to @scanman for the link to this letter written by John Steinbeck to his eldest son, Thom: Nothing good gets away


In November of 1958, John Steinbeck — the renowned author of, most notably, The Grapes of Wrath, East of Eden, and Of Mice and Men — received a letter from his eldest son, Thom, who was attending boarding school. In it, the teenager spoke of Susan, a young girl with whom he believed he had fallen in love.

Steinbeck replied the same day. His beautiful letter of advice can be enjoyed below. …..

Dear Thom:
We had your letter this morning. I will answer it from my point of view and of course Elaine will from hers.

First—if you are in love—that’s a good thing—that’s about the best thing that can happen to anyone. Don’t let anyone make it small or light to you.…………..

And don’t worry about losing. If it is right, it happens—The main thing is not to hurry. Nothing good gets away.

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Jordan Grumet Interviews Himself on his blog In My Humble Opinion (twitter handle @jordangrumet)


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Q: Taken as a whole, what is your blog about? What are the major themes?
A: If you asked me this question a few years ago, I would have said that my blog is a love letter to my patients. As I grow wiser, I realize that it is more accurately a love letter to my father.

When my father (a prominent oncologist) died, I was seven years old. As silly as it sounds, I spent a great deal of my childhood and young adult years trying to forgive myself for his death. Even though I knew I wasn't responsible for his aneurysm, I struggled with issues of being worthy of love.

As I read my own writing, I'm struck by the parallels. I fight to be protect my patients and lead them through the dying process, much in the way I wish I could have done for my father. …………

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Via Jackie-ES blog post: Join Patternfish and HeartStrings in Supporting WomenHeart (photo credit). I purchased the pattern, now to finish the projects I have started so I can knit this beautiful scarf.


Patternfish also launched a monthly charitable support initiative starting this month where the Designer of the Month picks a favorite charity and to which Patternfish will make a contribution. And I am the first to help kick off this initiative by choosing WomenHeart, the lifeblood organization devoted to improving the quality of life and the healthcare of women living with heart disease.


Patternfish will be donating $1.00 for each Thinking of You Scarf pattern sold during January to WomenHeart and I will match that dollar for dollar.

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Shout Outs

Updated 3/2017--photos and all links removed as many no longer active. 

Peggy (@tbtam), TBTAM, is this week’s host of Grand Rounds.  You can read this week’s twitter edition here. 
ONCE UPON  TIME…
Before Facebook and Twitter and Google+, and long before the word “social media” became religion, something called the Medical Blogging made its appearance on the world-wide web.
In those days, there was a small, close-knit community of medical bloggers ……..
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H/T @jilltomlinson  for the link to this Lost Angeles, CA blog post which gives a great viewpoint on disfigurement, identity, perception & reconstructive surgery.  It is from December 2010 but worth the read:  MIRRORINGS: The late great Lucy Grealy on her face, tragedy, beauty and identity
There was a long period of time, almost a year, during which I never looked in a mirror. It wasn’t easy, for I’d never suspected just how omnipresent are our own images. I began by merely avoiding mirrors, but by the end of the year I found myself with an acute knowledge of the reflected image,  …….
Long-term plastic surgery is not like in the movies. There is no one single operation that will change everything, and there is certainly no slow unwrapping of the gauze in order to view the final, remarkable result………
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Medpage Today’s article by Michael Smith, Face Transplants Offer High Yield With One Procedure:
Despite enormous complexity, full-face transplants can repair functional defects and improve major surface deficits that would otherwise take multiple reconstructive procedures if they were possible to do at all, researchers reported.
That conclusion comes in a report, online in the New England Journal of Medicine, on three full-face procedures carried out this year at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston…….
The NEJM article:  Pomahac B, et al "Three patients with full facial transplantation" N Engl J Med 2011.
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H/T to @jordangrumet for the heads up on a new blog by @WilliamDale_MD.  The blog is entitled WilliamDaleMD.  His nice first post is Medical Health Record:  a Personal Journey Down the Rabbit Hole
The Problem
“They told me I had to get the information myself,” she said.
“What? Why?”  I responded, annoyed.
“They said it wasn’t in their computer, and that I’d have to get it myself. They said since you’re a doctor here, you could easily check the computer yourself and get it from medical records,” my wife continued.
“That’s crazy! I’m not allowed to look at the computer records; I could lose my job!  And it’s much easier for them to get the paper records than me! ” I was incensed.…………….
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From DinoDoc, Musings of a Dinosaur , comes a thoughtful post:  In the Trenches: Quality of Life
Why is it easier to talk about quality of life with patients who are dying? Why don’t we factor these considerations into the decision-making for patients with conditions that aren’t fatal?
The presence of a terminal illness serves to focus everyone’s attentions. Widespread cancer metastases? Concerns about tight blood glucose control fade away. End-stage liver disease? Blood pressure control doesn’t matter so much any more. Bony pain from prostate cancer? Narcotic and sleeping pill addiction doesn’t even occur to anyone. …….
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H/T to @tbtam for this tweet:  “The year in street photography wp.me/p1Gna5-gh via @wordpressdotcom A young photographer hones her craft. I envy her.”  So do I.  Please check out her photography (better on a screen larger than your iPhone).
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A couple of weeks ago CBS Sunday Morning had a nice feature segment on the art of shopping bags.   Check this out:  The Museum of Bags

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Shout Outs

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


Nick Genes is hosting this week’s Grand Rounds at his blogborygmi tumblr.  You can read this week’s edition here.
Hello and welcome to this collection of medical links from across the web, written by providers, patients and analysts that work on the frontlines of modern healthcare.
This is my sixth time hosting Grand Rounds (three prior times on blogborygmi’s blogspot site, twice on Medgadget.com), and my first time with Tumblr.
I’ve been hearing about Tumblr for years, and after finally making the leap a few weeks back, I figured it might be a good fit for Grand Rounds today, as well. .….
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@doctorblackbear who blog at Asystole is the Most Stable Rhythm has written a beautiful post: Trust
"So the patient has been temporarily paralyzed by the drugs, and you're the one keeping them alive by squeezing air into their lungs...but...no pressure".
Gulp. 
I was holding the mask as tightly against her face as I could, sealing the rubber to her cheeks in the effort to keep highly oxygenated air from leaking out. Looking down at her from the head of the bed I saw the patient from a different vantage point, a place that made her look so vulnerable.
And she was vulnerable.  …….
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H/T to @antidoped who gave me the head’s up on @imapactednurse’s post:  1 shift, 3 stories
My name is Caleb.
Ive had this pain in my arse for 2 weeks now. The doc says its a hemorrhoid or something. All I know is, it fucking hurts like shit.
I am supposed to have surgery, but the hospital has cancelled it twice now. Says its too busy. ….
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From Street Anatomy: A Woman’s Back is Beauty
Edinburgh-based photographer Diana Eastman shot this gorgeous photograph overlayed with a classic anatomical illustration from what I believe is Grey’s Anatomy……..

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The Alliance for American Quilts received 119 quilts for it’s 2011 "Alliances: People, Patterns, Passion" contest.  My entry was “Redwork Quilt” and is included in this week’s (Week Four --Mon, Dec 5 – Dec 12) quilts being auctioned off on eBay.
All contest quilts will be auctioned via eBay starting on Monday, November 14, 2011 and ending December 12, 2011. All proceeds will support the AAQ and its projects. ….
Week FOUR auction guide: Monday, December 5 - Monday, December 12……
New this year: "Alliances" contest artist's were offered the chance to record their artist's statements thanks to the generous services of AAQ Business member, VoiceQuilt, visit them at www.voicequilt.com.

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Shout Outs

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

Colorado Health Insurance Insider is the host for this week’s Grand Rounds. You can read this week’s  edition here.
Welcome to the Fall Colors Grand Rounds!  We have several excellent articles from around the healthcare blogosphere for you this week.  Enjoy!
HealthBlawg’s David Harlow recently attended Health 2.0 in San Francisco and provides us with an excellent summary post about the conference. ………….
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The 2011 Charles Prize for Poetry Contest deadline for entries has passed.  Now while we await the announcement of the winners I hope you will enjoy reading the many wonderful entries.
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H/T to @DrMarkham for her new blog “eating despite cancer.”   The latest post is “i'm on chemo and food doesn't taste right...what can I do?”
The taste of foods often changes for people undergoing chemotherapy. This doesn’t happen to everyone receiving chemotherapy as part of cancer treatment, but it certainly happens to a lot. I’ve seen it happen as early as the first dose of chemotherapy, and it’s become my practice to warn people about this side effect. …….
We aren’t sure why this side effect happens, but there is medical literature to suggest that changes in both the sense of smell and the sense of taste occur with various chemotherapy drugs. The sense of smell is heavily tied into our sense of taste, so an alteration in either can really mess things up……..
The most important rule is to just keep trying. You’ll find something that will work. …..
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H/T to @The_Radiologist  for this tweet:  Great R4 piece on antibiotic resistance by @Dr_Stuart was repeated last night. Sobering times ahead. bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episod… #medicine
The link will allow you to listen to the 30 minute program which is well worth the time.
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I love the idea of self-healing materials!  H/T to @krupali for the link to this BBC news article by Leila Battison:  Bio-inspired plastic self-heals
The development of self-healing materials has surged forward as scientists have taken inspiration from biological systems.
Researchers at the University of Illinois in the US have found a way to pump healing fluids around a material like the circulation of animal's blood.
Materials that could repair themselves as they crack would have uses in civil engineering and construction.  …….
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Another great T-shirt!  This one with great advice:
  Available here.
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From WebMD:  Slideshow: Surprising Ways Smoking Affects Your Looks and Life (photo credit).  This is the first slide of the series.  Can you pick out the smoker? Make your pick and go check out the rest.
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Threads Magazine website has a very nice video (wish I could embed it here, but can’t):  Teach Yourself to Sew 2: Two Great Seam Finishes.  One uses the product Seams Great, the other is the Hong Kong finish.  Burda Style has a nice tutorial on the Hong Kong Binding Seam Finish

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Grand Rounds Volume 7 Number 52

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

Welcome to  Grand Rounds 7:52, the weekly collection of the some of the best in online medical writing from all (doctors, nurses, patients, healthcare professionals).  Next week’s host will be ZDoggMD. His theme is Funny Medical Stuff but he will accept good submissions on almost any medical topic.  He set a deadline of September 20 (today), so don’t delay.  You can email submissions to him at zdoggmd (AT) gmail (DOT) com 

Dr. Charles, The Examining Room, ask me to remind you of the Charles Poetry Contest.  It seems the “science hordes” have actively submitted poems while the medical folk have not.  You have until September 31st to get your poems in. 
Dr. Charles submitted this particularly moving poem to Grand Rounds for your enjoyment:  A Four Minute Heaven (by Kevin Nusser)
Heaven lasts four minutes
the duration of hyperactivity
from the oxygen-deprived brain
this is my four-minute stroll
It opens with me beside the bathtub
washing Sarah’s hair, she is 6 years old
I’ve used too much shampoo to get extra bubbles
and they are running down the wall above Sarah’s hand ………….
Go read the rest of this poem and check out the other ones.
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Paul Levy, Not Running a Hospital, asks a seeming simple question “What would you do?" which garnered many thoughtful comments.  If you haven’t read it, please, do and the comments too.
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The post painfully aware  from PalMD, White Coat Underground, is aptly titled from so many angles.  I hope you will go read it all (photo credit):
She didn’t look well.  No one “looks well” sitting in an crowded ER, but she really didn’t look good.  At first glance from across the room I assumed her to be fairly old, how old I wasn’t sure.  Scrawled atop her clipboard in red Sharpie was ADMIT TO MEDICINE. I pulled the board and walked over to her. ……….
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Bongi, other things amanzi, tells us about how medicine and culture can collide in his post tangled tassels
in quite a few of the cultures in south africa people tie ribbons, strings and tassels around their own and their children's wrists and waists. these tassels are imbibed with power to keep evil spirits at bay, i am told. if these tassels come off then the patient is completely unprotected from any and all marauding evil spirits that may be lurking around. of course, not wanting to be responsible for the unopposed assault by multiple evil spirits, most people are fairly reticent to remove these things. i saw it slightly differently. …..
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Henry Stern, InsureBlog, introduces a patient on the lookout for a "Competitive Oncology."
……….So what is she looking for?
Well, obviously that they "connect" on a personal level, but then she said "I want a doctor who's competitive." When I asked what that meant, her answer stunned and delighted me: ………….
Go read Henry’s post to find out the answer.  I loved it!
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Movin’ Meat tells us “what health care rationing looks like”:
………….. OK, I can get behind those as non-emergency ER conditions. I'd quite like to see those folks re-routed to clinics or PCPs. But wait, there's more! Other "Non-emergent conditions" for which the state will not pay include:
Chest Pain
Abdominal Pain
………. There are many others -- these are just the most ridiculous "non-emergency" conditions that jumped out at me. It's also manifestly arbitrary and haphazard what made it onto the list and what did not. The HCA considers "Cholelithiasis with acute Cholecystitis" an emergency condition worth paying for, but "Acute Cholecystitis" is not. The state will pay for hand cellulitis, but not for the more dangerous foot cellulitis……...
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Jordan, In My Humble Opinion, writes a lovely piece on a time when he had A Moment Of Clarity
Although the name on the chart was oddly familiar I couldn't place her. I was covering for a partner who was on vacation. It felt like my day would never end.
When she bopped into the office I knew immediately. We went to school together. Years ago. She sat down quietly on the exam table typing away on her mobile phone. I approached cautiously my mind musing on occupational hazards. I wondered if she would recognize me. ……….
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d.o.ctor writes about an observed pericardial window procedure and the irony that a big heart can mean a medical abnormality and a generous spirit:   A Window into the Heart
It's quite curious really, the expressions we use to describe a person's generous spirit can have a completely different meaning in medicine. Let me explain...
I was assigned a patient one very early Monday morning. He had arrived at the hospital with increasing shortness of breath, and upon further investigation it turned out that he had pericardial effusion. In the time leading up to the surgery, pericardial window with drainage of the effusion, …..
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Dr John M has been in a small rut this week. During a “rut-busting” indoor training ride (complete with some good tunes), he was inspired by the framed Hippocratic Oath hanging on the basement wall--“the one they gave me as I walked across the stage in 1989”:   The basics…
………I read it, again. There was a churn, from within. Sometimes it helps to remember the basics—the bottom line, the real meaning, the forest, not the trees or the CPT codes, or the…(many) negative things that draw our hearts, our minds, and our souls from the basics.  ………….
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Richard Winters, MD, Beyond the Clinical, is a first time grand rounds submitter (thank you very much).  He gives us 5 ways to Fight Bitterness and Be A Content Physician Leader (photo credit)
I was crabby.
But I didn’t know it.
Relaxing into the evening. Sitting on the couch. Reading news and checking email. Surrounded by family.
My 6yo daughter excitedly asks me something about smurfs and mermaids. I snap.
“It’s time for bed. Go brush your teeth. I need time alone. And this place is a mess.”
Then I feel guilty………….
None of us want to take the stresses and anxiety from the work place home.  Go check out his tips.
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The Boerewors Emergency Medicine Chronicles wrote a remembrance post sparked by 9-11.  He lost two friends that day when the towers fell, but this post is from his days in a South Africa emergency room:  Triage
Saturday 2 July 1988.
About 17H20.
I was at work as a Charge Nurse in the Department of Emergency and Ambulatory Paediatrics aka 'Children's Casualty' , (Area 161) in the Johannesburg Hospital .
We were having a very pleasant afternoon …. reasonably quiet,a few interesting cases to keep us on our toes but mostly we were relaxed and chatting.  ……
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Kim, Emergiblog, tells us how making a mistake as a teenager these days is not like it used to be; it can follow you forever: 
Somebody's Baby.
The car drifted by the ambulance entrance. The glow of the brake lights lit the corner of my eye.
Incoming.
I closed my textbook. Sigh. I was hoping for downtime.
There was activity in the parking lot. A group emerged, formed a circle and scooted rapidly through the pneumatic doors, right up to the nurses station.
They all spoke at once.
Not breathing…won’t wake up…vomited…alcohol poisoning…can’t wake her up…drinking….not breathing…oh my god…poured water on her…throwing up…called parents…voicemail…
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Dr. Val, Better Health, interviewed actress Meaghan Martin ( @ettejnahgaem ) who shared how she overcame "poke-a-phobia" on the #HealthyVision show:  Actress Meaghan Martin: Teenagers, Self-Esteem, And Contact Lenses  (photo credit)
…….. I was a typical nerd as a kid. I had glasses, braces, and an asthma inhaler. ……….
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Steven, SteveSeay.com, discusses using prank phone calls and "intentional mistakes" as a cognitive behavioral strategy for reducing social anxiety in his post Social Anxiety Treatment:   CBT & Intentional Mistake Practice (an example)
When I was a kid, one form of mischief that was briefly popular in my neighborhood was crank calling strangers. Usually, the bravest kid in the group would pick up the phone, and with the encouragement of all the other kids in the room, would dial a random telephone number. A brief, very Bart Simpson-esque conversation would then ensue. Usually it would go something like this:
Kid: Hello, ma’am. I am conducting a brief survey for the Grocer’s Association. Do you have a minute to answer a quick question?
Stranger: Of course. How can I help you?
Kid: I was wondering if you have Sara Lee in the freezer.
Stranger: Why, yes I do.
Kid: Well then let her out!!!
We would then bust out in laughter and hang up the phone ……………….
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Do you use black humor in your workplace?  Do you keep it there or do you use it in public places, including Facebook and Twitter?  There has been much discussion of this over the past week and Laika, Laika's MedLibLog, writes a post “about the inappropriate use of black humor by doctors (using terms like "labia-ward") at Facebook & Twitter”:   Medical Black Humor, that is Neither Funny nor Appropriate.  Please, go read it all.
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Elaine Schattner, MD, Medical Lessons, wants us to Keep it in Focus: One in Seventy.  One in 70 is the number of women in the U.S. who develop breast cancer in their forties.  Elaine feels this “astonishingly high number gets lost in the media's mixed messages about breast cancer awareness and screening.”
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Dr Ves, CasesBlog, writes Doctors are natural communicators - social media is extension of what they do every day and gives us some simple guidance for social media use
The suggested guidance for social media use by health professionals is very simple and based on a recent book by a nurse and social media advocate:
1. Remember the basics:
- your professional focus
- the laws around patient privacy (HIPAA in the U.S.)
- the professional standards of regulatory bodies and of your employers
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A guest post by Robert Peinert on The Sterile Eye blog asks “Is the Tide Changing?”  (photo credit)
Over the last several years, as I continue to do research for various projects, I’ve read about a growing number of Medical Photography Departments that are shutting their doors or changing their focus. Private hospitals, public community-based hospitals, and even several university-based hospitals have closed their photography and media departments in recent years. Costs and hospital/departmental needs are among the top reasons, however a more reoccurring reason is the growth of technology…….
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Skeptic Scalpel (@Skepticscalpel) wants us to know “why Joint Commission hospital ratings suck”:  Joint Commission Proves It's as Irrelevant As HealthGrades
The New York Times reports that the Joint Commission has just published a list of its 405 "Top Performing Hospitals." As is typical of these types of evaluations, most of the large, well-known teaching hospitals where knowledgeable folks [like doctors] go for care when they are really sick didn't make the list. ……
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Louise,  Colorado Health Insurance Insider,  tells us that Negotiating Premiums Doesn't Lower the Cost of Healthcare
………….How would it help to have health insurance exchange boards negotiating with health insurance carriers to try to lower premiums – without addressing the root problem, which is the ever-increasing cost of healthcare?  If the carriers were to agree to lower premiums, they would have to cut back on how much they spend in claims, since that’s where most of the premium dollars go (you can only trim admin costs so much).  That would mean either cutting back on benefits or paying providers less money for the work they do.  Neither of those options are just between the carriers and the exchange board.  Cutting back on benefits directly impacts the insureds, and cutting back on reimbursements directly impacts providers.  Either way, it’s not something that can be realistically “negotiated” between health insurance carriers and health insurance exchange boards.  The other major players in the healthcare industry (Pharma, hospitals, doctors, device makers, etc.) have to get involved too. ……….
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Dr Ves, Allergy Notes, tells us that food-specific IgE tests aren't sufficient evidence for eliminating foods from a child’s diet
In a study of more than 100 children on food elimination diets based on positive serum IgE immunoassay results, oral food challenges (OFCs) demonstrated that most of the foods were being unnecessarily eliminated from the diet. …….
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Nora O’Brien-Suric, Health AGEnda blog, provides us an overview of geriatric emergency rooms in her post:  “Building a Better Emergency Department for Older People”
In an earlier post I mentioned my observations of how traumatic a trip to the emergency room can be for older people, and I promised to write about the emergence of geriatric emergency department (ED) models that provide better care for older people and can be a cost savings to the hospital. …….
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Jessie Gruman, Prepared Patient Forum, talks about how Nine out of 10 of Us Like Health-Related Numbers
“My doctor can titrate my chemotherapy to the milligram but can’t tell me when I am going to die,” a friend who was struggling with his treatment for cancer complained to me a couple years ago.  ….

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Thank you for contributing and reading. 

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Suture for a Living to Host Grand Rounds

I’ll be your host next Tuesday, September 20th, for Grand Rounds Volume 7 Number 52.   It will be my sixth time as host of this the weekly compilation of the best of the medical bloggers.  I have no specific theme in mind.

Submissions should be recent.  Please, only submit one (your best) post per blog.  Submissions are welcome until noon (CST) Monday September 19th. 

Send an email to me ---  rlbatesmd(at)gmail(dot)com  ---   with Grand Rounds in the subject line.  Please help me out by including your site name, site url, your post  title, post url, your name and a sentence or two about why you think your submission is great. 

 

In the meantime check out my previous five editions:

Grand Rounds 4:33 (May 6, 2008)

Grand Rounds Vol. 5 No. 52 (September 15, 2009)

Grand Rounds Vol 6, No 26 (March 23, 2010)

Grand Rounds Vol 7 No 20 (February 8, 2011)

Grand Rounds Volume 7 Number 48 (August 23, 2011)

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Shout Outs

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

There were no takers for hosting this week’s Grand Rounds.  If you would like to be a future host:
… Send an email to Nick Genes (you can find his contact info at blogborygmi.com) and request to be considered as a future host. Include a link to your blog. Host bloggers must have been blogging regularly for at least 6 months, have a health theme, demonstrate good writing skills, professionalism, and respect for scientific medicine. If your blog meets those requirements (and is approved by Nick or Val) they’ll contact you via email to schedule your host date.
If you missed last week’s edition, then check it out.  Dr. Rich, Covert Rationing,  was the host. You can read last week’s edition here.
ZDoggMD will be hosting on September 27th. His theme will be Funny Medical Stuff but he will accept good submissions on almost any medical topic.  You can email submissions to him at zdoggmd (AT) gmail (DOT) com
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Dr. Charles is “Calling for Entries in the 2011 Charles Prize for Poetry Contest.”
Announcing the second annual Poetry Contest!
An award will be given to the writer who submits for consideration the most outstanding poem within the realm of health, science, or medicine. ……….
The contest began Wednesday August 31st and ends September 31st, 2011. The winners will be chosen shortly thereafter by an elite group of 8 judges (other doctors, friends with literary training, and select bloggers).  The contest is open to everyone.
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In case you missed it, I just want to point you to this lovely post by @doctorwes:  The Flywheel
(With apologies to Harry Chapin)
"Welcome to BA Cardiology Associates, young doctor, we're thrilled you've decided to join us. As you recall, we guarantee your salary for the first several years then when you're practice is established, your salary will be proportional to your productivity. Oh, and if you need anything, just let us know."
A child arrived just the other day. He came to the world in the usual way...
"I had the most amazing case today! His heart rate was so slow..."
"Doctor, we're impressed at how things are going."
He learned to walk while I was away...
"Thanks for helping out……
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Kim, Emergiblog, is the host of the latest edition of Change of Shift (September 2011)! You can find the schedule and the COS archives at Emergiblog. (photo credit)
Welcome to the September, 2011 edition of Change of Shift!
This is quite the eclectic selection of posts from across the nursing blogosphere, composed of those submitted for inclusion and those I found in my travels through the neighborhood.
Remember, submissions are always accepted for Change of Shift, there is never a deadline to meet, so don’t hesitate to submit a post at any time.
Let’s begin! …………………….
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H/T to @scanman for retweeting this “@JenniferAdaeze: I helped found a Journal of #NarrativeMedicine theintima.org follow @the_intima & spread the word :) #meded”. 
It will be interesting to follow The Intima, a Journal of Narrative Medicine.  There are sections for poetry, fiction, non-fiction, and art inspired by medicine.  Check out this fictional story by Dana Gage about a medical student struggling with a dying child:  Nightwatch
Rane entered the room hesitantly; she didn’t want to enter at all; she had pleaded with the intern and then to the resident, who just shook his head and said it wasn’t up to him. The Chief Resident had ordered, had insisted upon it, that she see this particular child, work her up. …………
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H/T to @evidencematters who alerted me to this Guardian article by Patrick Barkham:  Nazis, needlework and my dad (photo credit)
Not many men belong to a stitching group, but Tony Casdagli picked up his enthusiasm for the craft from his father, who kept himself sane by fashioning subversive messages as a PoW  ………….

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Shout Outs

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

Dr. Rich, Covert Rationing,  is the host for this week’s Grand Rounds. You can read this week’s edition here.
While Grand Rounds is normally the highlight of everybody’s week here in the medical blogosphere, this time it’s different. …………..
But be assured that there is good stuff to follow. So, if you find yourself incapable of focusing your attention on Grand Rounds at the moment, simply bookmark this page, and return to it once your sense of soaring happiness returns (as it inevitably must) to a more normal state. Be assured that this week’s entries are timeless enough to outlive your ecstasy (an emotion which – alas! – to be effective, must always be transient).
So let us begin.  ………
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Dr. Charles is “Calling for Entries in the 2011 Charles Prize for Poetry Contest.”
Announcing the second annual Poetry Contest!
An award will be given to the writer who submits for consideration the most outstanding poem within the realm of health, science, or medicine. ……….
The contest began Wednesday August 31st and ends September 31st, 2011. The winners will be chosen shortly thereafter by an elite group of 8 judges (other doctors, friends with literary training, and select bloggers).  The contest is open to everyone.
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Fellow blogger Margaret Polaneczky, MD, TBTAM, is one of the authors of the American Academy of Pediatrics Textbook of Adolescent Healthcare!  She writes:
I wrote the chapter on contraception, but it’s just a teeny-tiny piece of this amazingly comprehensive text, available either in hardcopy or as an e-book from the AAP Bookstore.
Great work, Peggy!
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H/T to @doctorwes for tweeting this:  “One to bookmark: a website that manages medical expenses simplee.com”
The site looks like it would be very helpful in keeping track of medical expenses, especially from multiple sources (doctors, hospitals, labs, etc).  I plan to bookmark it and look at it closer.
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H/T to @hrana for the link to this Scientific American article by Larry Greenemeier:  Medical Mystery: How can some people hear their own eyeballs move?  (photo credit)
It sounds like something out of an Edgar Allen Poe tale of horror. A man becomes agitated by strange sounds only to find that they are emanating from inside his own body—his heart, his pulse, the very movement of his eyes in their sockets. Yet superior canal dehiscence syndrome (SCDS) is a very real affliction caused by a small hole in the bone covering part of the inner ear. Such a breach results in distortion of hearing and, often, impaired balance.   …………….
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I stumbled upon a new-to-me quilting blog – A Quilting Life – by Sherri.  Here is a recent post: Quilt in a Day! (photo credit)
I wonder how many of us started quilting with Quilt in a Day quilts by Eleanor Burns.  I know I made about 8 quilts from her Double Irish Chain book before feeling confident enough to try other patterns. (I happened to get on an elevator with her at Spring Quilt Market, and  thanked her profusely for her inspiration during my quilting beginnings--she probably thought I was crazy; I kept going on and on about all the quilts I made from her patterns those first couple of years)!  Anyway, because of procrastination I needed to make a baby quilt in a day.  And I had just a jelly roll and yardage for backing.  ………….

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Shout Outs

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

Health 3.0 Blog  is the host for this week’s Grand Rounds. You can read this week’s edition here.
Welcome to this week’s edition of Grand Rounds. You can find the medical blogosphere’s best next week at Covert Rationing.
We’ve taken a different approach this week to organizing Grand Rounds. You can find all the submissions below in this post. But, we’ve also selected quotes from each blog and highlighted those on the main page. Consistent with our themes, we’ve also tagged all the posts related to health, happiness, design or innovation. You can search for these tags to see how each theme plays out. We’ve also added bits of commentary to some of the individual quotes and summaries - especially when we’ve read something recently that relates to the general topic or idea………
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I was aware of this new children’s book "Maggie Goes on a Diet" (I haven’t gotten to read it, but title makes me feel focus is wrong. Should be focused on eating healthy diet.), but @LindaP_MD’s tweet alerted me to a nice interview @drclaire did with @BridgetBlythe on @NECN about the book:  Talking to kids about weight, obesity


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Did you see the interview Albert Schweitzer (@SchweitzerASF) did with @docgurley?  --“The Addictive Power of Spending One’s Days Doing Something Worthwhile”: Five Questions for a Fellow with Jan Gurley, MD
Since 1979, ASF’s Lambaréné Schweitzer Fellows Program has selected senior U.S. medical students to serve clinical rotations as junior physicians at the iconic Schweitzer Hospital in Lambaréné, Gabon, Africa—the region’s primary source of health care since Dr. Albert Schweitzer founded it in 1913.
Jan Gurley, MD is one of those Fellows. ……….
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Check out the interview of @drkt at OnSurg.com:  Featured Surgeon, late summer 2011
First-year surgery resident Dr Katie has been sharing her educational experience online since undergraduate school. OnSurg is grateful for her participation in our Q & A:
What’s your story?
I first knew I wanted to be a doctor my senior year of high school (was going to go into Forensics from 7th-12th), and was told I’d never make it and that I’d change my mind. I knew what I wanted and wanted to prove people wrong at the same time. It wasn’t until the summer after my junior year that I actually had the chance to be in the hospital. When that time came, I knew that medicine was right for me.  ………….
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H/T to @DrSnit tweeting this:  “Monsters in the Dark by @chemo_babe bit.ly/reZDOi Parenting through cancer. "I don’t want to be the little boy whose mommy died.”   I hope you will go read the entire post.
…………….He grew earnest.
“But your heart will stop beating when you die. You can’t have love without a heart.”
“Love doesn’t just live in my heart. My love for you will continue on in your heart.”
Then he burst into tears and threw his arms around my neck.
“Mommy, I don’t want to be the little boy whose mommy died.”
I embraced him, stunned into silence. I looked for words of comfort. …………….
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H/T to @sandnsurf for finding and posting these “highly inappropriate adverts”:  High quality adverts (photo credit) 
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H/T to @BiteTheDust  for the link to this news article:   13 yr old designs breakthrough solar array based on Fibonacci sequence.
Plenty of us head into the woods to find inspiration. Aidan Dwyer, 13, went to the woods and had a eureka moment that could be a major breakthrough in solar panel design. ………
You can read Aidan’s award-winning essay here, which walks you through his experiment design and his results. But the short story is that his tree design generated much more electricity — especially during the winter solstice, when the sun is at its lowest point in the sky. At that point, the tree design generated 50 percent more power, without any adjustments to its declination angle. …………..
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The International Quilt Festival Summer 2011 Newsletter has a very nice tutorial for making a Patchwork/Purse Tote (pdf).  (photo credit)

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Grand Rounds Volume 7 Number 48

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

Thank you for coming to Grand Rounds 7:48, the weekly collection of the some of the best in online medical writing from all (doctors, nurses, patients, healthcare professionals).  Next week’s will be hosted by Health 3.0 Blog.
Along with the excellent posts, I’ve included pictures of the changes cameras have gone through over the years – from the pin-hole camera to digital phone cameras.  Enjoy!

Dr. Charles hasn’t had much time lately, but I was able to scribble down this pediatric poem:  A Beating.  As one commenter figured out, Dr. Charles is a new father.  Congratulations! and thanks for the poem.     (camera obscura – photo credit)
Jordan, In My Humble Opinion, writes about the covenant of being a doctor:
I mean it is kind of lonely....being your doctor. I picture it as sort of a covenant. Between you and I.
On one side you. And your family. And friends. Your house and your dogs. Your communities and lives.
On the other side me. Alone.

Skeptical Scalpel has written a post,  Do Surgeons Suffer From "Decision Fatigue"?, in response to a NY Times Magazine article.
……..Query: Has anyone seen studies linking surgical error rate to the time of day?”
The answer is, “Yes.”
But if the question had been, “Anyone seen any good studies linking surgical error rate to time of day?” the answer would have been, “No.” ………….

Dr. Schattner, MedicalLessons, talks about what she has learned from the offbeat and in some ways disturbing story of a young woman who's made a business of having had a rare form of cancer, epithe­lioid heman­gioen­dothelioma:   Notes on Crazy Sexy Cancer             (daguerreotype camera – photo credit)

Dr. Val, Better Health, asks Should Pharmacies Limit Teen Access To Protein Supplements?
A strange thing happened to me at a CVS pharmacy two days ago. I was attempting to purchase a protein drink when the girl at the counter asked me to show her my I.D. card. I assumed she meant my CVS savings card and was sincerely confused when she rejected it, saying, “No, your picture I.D.”
I dug through my purse to find my driver’s license while the girl explained,
“You have to be 18 years old to buy this product. I need to type in your date of birth into the computer.”  ……

Carolyn is a heart attack survivor who blogs at  HEART SISTERS.  In her post,    "How to be a good patient" , she shares her experiences and expertise she has gained in having a chronic illness.
Beth, Calling the Shots, discusses the controversial use of “war” terminology to describe cancer in her post:  Young Adults With Cancer: Why 'War' Analogies Work But 'Warrior' Analogies Do Not.
Many, many people don't like war analogies when it comes to cancer,  especially those of us who've been afflicted by it. We often hear that a comrade has lost or won his or her battle with cancer. Or about society declaring war on cancer. Or about someone fighting bravely against the disease.
Sure, this language of war is cliche, giving us a picture of the brave warrior fighting to the death against cancer.  ………….

Dr. Pullen
shared in his submission email his thoughts of using his own name as the name of his blog:  “I've thought a long time about why on earth I chose to use just my name as my blog name.  Thinking back it was probably not one that is going to draw much interest except from maybe the few who know me.  Maybe it was my interest in eponymous diseases.  This prompted me to have some fun with a word that is not on the tip of many tongues.”  Enjoy his post:  Eponymous Blog on Eponymous Diseases.         (Brownie   --- photo credit)

DrRich explains why direct-pay medical practices, contrary to official opinions, are not only ethical, but also may be the only remaining way for doctors to practice medicine in accordance with traditional medical ethics:  An Epiphany on Direct Pay Practices.


HealthBlawg takes a look at an unusual acquisition: a large health care system acquiring a Medicaid HMO.  What does it mean?  Check out their post:  Partners Health Care acquiring Neighborhood Health Plan: The 800-Pound Gorilla and the Fig Leaf?      (Canon F1 – photo credit)


Over at InsureBlog, Henry Stern reports on new breast cancer coverage for women only, and why that's not necessarily such a good thing:  Keeping Abreast of Cancer: Double-Standard edition

Laika,  Laika's MedLibLog, in her post -- RIP Statistician Paul Meier. Proponent not Father of the RCT – tells us  Paul Meier who recently died really had a great influence as a statistician in promoting the RCT (& he "invented" the survival curve).  Her post, however, focuses on the wrong headline in Boing Boing (the first headline she saw about the death of Paul Meijer), claiming that Paul is the father of the RCT.  In her post she tried to find out the real origin of the RCT.

Rick Pescatore, a medical student and EMT who blogs at Little White Coats  submitted a post --Help I've Fallen and I can't get up!  -- which details his experiences with senior falls as an EMT and provides a resource for seniors in his area (Philadelphia and Southern New Jersey area) to receive free medical alert devices from the PCOM Emergency Medicine Club.    (Poloraid  -- photo credit)
Amy, DiabetesMine, wants us to know about the upcoming summit on noncommunicable diseases at the UN next month:  Diabetes Battles for Obama’s / World’s Attention
Anybody heard about the first-ever upcoming United Nations (UN) High-Level Summit Meeting on Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs), in which heads of state from around the world will meet in New York City on Sept. 19 and 20?  Um, we’re not sure President Obama has either, and that’s very bad news for diabetes, according to the International Diabetes Federation (IDF). ……….

Ryan,  ACP Internist blog, looks at the recent trends in healthy lifestyle choices by adapting two recent studies (and adding a touch of humor):   Smoking in front of the television must be really bad
ACP Hospitalist blog  feels doctors may already have all the skills they need to make the right diagnosis:  History and physical the best way to diagnose patients   (iPhone which includes camera  -- photo credit)

Geeners, Code blog: Tales of a Nurse, gives us a view of what it’s like to be a school nurse:  Interview - School Nurse
Well, what better time to post my interview with Erin at Tales of a School Zoned Nurse than now, when everyone’s headed back to the classroom? ……
Steven J. Seay, Ph.D. presents us with a timely post as school is back in session:   School Refusal & Parental Stigma: Am I a Bad Parent?
Like any other behavior, school refusal does not have a singular cause. This is pretty self-evident, but in the heat of the moment when your child is having a tantrum, this fact is quickly forgotten. It is simply too easy to conclude that you have raised a “bad child.” Sadly, much of society might wrongly agree with you. ……..
Louise, Colorado Health Insurance Insider, discusses the PPACA and changes made over the year since it was signed into law in her post:   Seeking Certainty
…. It's been over a year since the PPACA was signed into law.  Many Americans are eagerly awaiting 2014 when their health conditions will no longer limit them to high risk pools and when their health insurance premiums will be subsidized.  Health insurance carriers have already made numerous changes to comply with the law, with many more planned for the next few years.  A lot of states are working hard to come up with health insurance exchanges that will best serve their residents' particular needs.  Many other states have mounted costly legal battles against the individual mandate.  Some states - like Colorado - have done both.  In a nutshell, an awful lot of money and time is being expended on a law that still has a very uncertain legal future……….

Pathologist Gizabeth, Metodical Madness, sends us a poem, Monarch Butterfly and well wishes. 



REFERENCES
History of Photography by Mary Bellis
The Development of the Camera over the Years by Mandi
Canon Camera Story
History of the Digital Camera by Mary Bellis

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Suture for a Living to Host Grand Rounds

I’ll be your host next Tuesday, August 23rd, for Grand Rounds Volume 7 Number 48.   It will be my fifth time as host of this the weekly compilation of the best of the medical bloggers.  I have no specific theme in mind, but if you need a “spark of a suggestion” think of  changes:  schools are back in session, football season will soon begin, and there is just a hint of fall with no more triple digit weather here in the south.   Now apply that to medicine/surgery.

Submissions should be recent.  Please, only submit one (your best) post per blog.  Submissions are welcome until noon (CST) Monday August 22. 

Send an email to me ---  rlbatesmd(at)gmail(dot)com  ---   with Grand Rounds in the subject line.  Please help me out by including your site name, site url, your post  title, post url, your name and a sentence or two about why you think your submission is great. 

 

In the meantime check out my previous four editions:

Grand Rounds 4:33 (May 6, 2008)

Grand Rounds Vol. 5 No. 52 (September 15, 2009)

Grand Rounds Vol 6, No 26 (March 23, 2010)

Grand Rounds Vol 7 No 20 (February 8, 2011)

Shout Outs

Dr. Pullen  is the host for this week’s Grand Rounds. You can read this week’s edition here (photo credit).

I think I learned my lesson this time.  The first two times I hosted Grand Rounds many of the posts seemed to come from happy bloggers.  I think the lesson this time is don’t be a host when all the news is bad.  Maybe it’s the drought and heat wave in much of the U.S.  Or maybe using the words of Bill Clinton “It’s the economy, Stupid.”  For whatever the reason this week’s Grand Rounds is dominated by rants and whines from bloggers around the globe.  ………  To try to have some fun with emotions I decided to try to draw a sketch to give you an idea of the mood of the writer:

Dr Bates gets first position since she is hosting Grand Rounds next week.  She breaks the trend too in not being upset or angry.  She writes at Suture for a Living wondering How old is too old for cosmetic surgery?  Her answer?    ……….

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Interesting ethical question posed by the MedPage Today article by Mikaela Conley:  Harvesting Dead Girl's Eggs Raises Ethical Issues

An Israeli court has granted permission for family members to extract and freeze the eggs of its 17-year-old daughter, who died earlier this month in a car accident, according to the Israeli English-language website Haaretz.  ……..

"Ethically, the important issue is not whether the woman would have wanted children," said Rosamond Rhodes, director of bioethics education at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York. …..

Instead, Rhodes said the critical issue is whether Chen would have wanted her biological children to come to life after she was dead.  ……….

The comments are interesting, also.  Personally (remember I don’t have any children, unable to get pregnant), I don’t think it would be a good idea.  I lost my father when I was 8.  I can’t imagine being a mother-less child.

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H/T to @Skepticscalpel for the tweet  which linked to this NY Times Health article -- “Beautifully written by a patient’  --  Opinion: I Won’t Have the Stomach for This

I AM a ravenous, ungraceful eater. I have been compared to a dog and a wolf, and have not infrequently been reminded to chew. I am always the first to finish what’s on my plate, and ever since I was a child at my mother’s table, have perfected the art of stealthily helping myself to seconds before anyone else has even touched fork to frog leg. My husband and I have been known to spend our rent money on the tasting menu at Jean Georges, our savings on caviar or wagyu tartare. We plan our vacations around food — the province of China known for its chicken feet, the village in Turkey that grows the sweetest figs, the town in northwest France with the very best raclette.

So it was a jarring experience when, a few months ago, at 36 years old, I learned I had stomach cancer.   ……….

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H/T to @EvidenceMatters for the link to another article on food and a human’s relationship to it (as EM put it: Read it: it probably isn't what you think.)  by @fatnutritionistIf only poor people understood nutrition.

It seems like some people are constantly wringing their hands about how poor people eat (to wit: badly.) And the most popularly proposed solution is to teach them (“them”) more about nutrition! Or educate them in general.……….

Here comes the part where I bust up that nice, warm bubble bath. ……..

Because getting enough to eat is always our first priority.  …………….

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A nice post from @DrJenGunter: What is a menstrual cup and why should I use one? (photo credit)

A menstrual cup is exactly what you think it is: a cup to catch menstrual fluid. The concept has been around since the 1930’s, but has recently become more popular. Some cups are made of rubber, but allergies to latex and other components of rubber are increasingly more common so the best option is a cup made of medical grade silicone, which is hypoallergenic………….

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An informative post from @drfiala, PSB - the Orlando plastic surgery blog:   New side-effects from Propecia? (photo credit)

For those users of Propecia - used for hair loss in men, and Proscar - used for the treatment of benign prostatic hypertrophy (BPH) in men, here is a new concern raised by Health Canada, which is the Canadian version of the FDA.

Apparently, prescription drugs Propecia and Proscar seemed to be linked to rare cases of male breast cancer. ……….

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Isn’t this just an absolutely beautiful quilt?!!!  I don’t know much about it.  It was shared with me on Google+ by Alex Veronelli

 

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Shout Outs

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

Dr. Deb Serani is the host for this week’s Grand Rounds. You can read this week’s edition here (photo credit).
Grand Rounds is a weekly round up of the best health blog posts on the Internet. Each week a different blogger takes turns hosting - me this time around - and summarizes the submissions of the week.
As a music lover, I thought I'd give Grand Rounds a vintage vinyl feel. So please make sure your phonographs are ready to go. Thanks to Dr. Val Jones and Dr. Nick Genes for the invite.   ……….
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I had already read this MiM post by Cutter (surgery resident), Not just us anymore, before @MotherinMed tweeted
Perfect companion reading to last MiM post: Bringing Out the Mother in All of Us. (by @paulinechen) http://nyti.ms/rdrxia
She is so right. I don’t think it matters which order you read them in, but I go read both of them.
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H/T to @MotherinMed for tweeting the link to this NY Times op-ed piece written by Dr. Ezekiel Emanu: Shortchanging Cancer Patients
RIGHT now cancer care is being rationed in the United States.
Probably to their great disappointment, President Obama’s critics cannot blame this rationing on death panels or health care reform. Rather, it is caused by a severe shortage of important cancer drugs.
Of the 34 generic cancer drugs on the market, as of this month, 14 were in short supply. ……….
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H/T to @krupali and @paulinechen for the link to the Slate article by Meghan O'Rourke and Leeat Granek: How To Help Friends in Mourning -- Condolence notes? Casseroles? What our grief survey revealed. (bold emphasis is mind)
……….The most surprising aspect of the results is how basic the expressed needs were, and yet how profoundly unmet many of these needs went. Asked what would have helped them with their grief, the survey-takers talked again and again about acknowledgement of their grief. They wanted recognition of their loss and its uniqueness; they wanted help with practical matters; they wanted active emotional support. What they didn't want was to be offered false comfort in the form of empty platitudes. Acknowledgement, love, a receptive ear, help with the cooking, company—these were the basic supports that mourning rituals once provided …….
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Medgadget’s post, Animated Anatomies Exhibition of Historical Anatomy Flap Books, prompted me to ask @UAMSlibrary (my medical school) if they had any of them. They replied they would check and get back to me. And they did (photo credit):
Historical Anatomy Flap Books at UAMS http://on.fb.me/plDXqw (cc: @rlbates)
I think I may have to find the time to go look at the ones here locally.
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H/T to @DrVes for the link to the article on Computer Vision Syndrome [INFOGRAPHIC]. From the piece comes this good advice – remember the 20-20-20 rule. Every 20 minutes take a 20 sec break to look away from the screen at something 20 feet away.
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CNN reporter Matt Sloane is following Diana Nyad’s swim from Cuba to Florida -- Nyad: Today's swim shows 60s 'not too late' for goals (August 8, 2011)
Editor's note: CNN alone will be in the support boats with Diana Nyad on her attempt to swim from Cuba to Florida. @MattCNN will be Tweeting live. CNN.com and The Chart will have a position tracker.
(CNN) -- Diana Nyad's personal test has begun. At 7:45 p.m. ET she jumped into the water and began her 103-mile swim between Cuba and Florida. ……….
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Why Quilts Matter: History, Art & Politics is a nine-part documentary series which will be available to PBS stations nationwide this fall.  I sure hope my local station carries it.

"Why Quilts Matter: History, Art & Politics" - Independent Production from The Kentucky Quilt Project, Inc. from The Kentucky Quilt Project, Inc. on Vimeo.

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Shout Outs

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

James Logan, MD is the host for this week’s Grand Rounds. You can read this week’s virtual tour edition here.
Remember the days when one accessed the internet by using a telephone line to dial up an isp? For that matter, remember when one made telephone calls using an actual telephone line? Well, for this blogger, that day has returned. I very foolishly agreed to host grand rounds during the week after a move to a new apartment (still no agreement on a new dining room table, by the way) not realizing that our high speed internet would not yet be set up during the time I would be preparing this post. No matter. I temporarily have free dial-up access! Hence, this grand rounds is going to be a tribute to Web 1.0 and the various deprecated tags of HTML 4. Comments, of course, are still enabled. ……….
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Elaine Schattner, M.D, Medical Lessons, discusses the recent news regarding mammograms in her recent post:  Mammography Update
This week I’ve come across a few articles and varied blog posts on screening mam­mog­raphy. The impetus for rehashing the topic is a new set of guide­lines issued by the American College of Obste­tri­cians and Gyne­col­o­gists. That group of women’s health providers now advises that most women get annual mam­mo­grams starting at age 40.
Why every year? I have no idea. To the best of my knowledge, there are no data to support that annual mam­mo­grams are cost-​​effective or life-​​saving for women in any age bracket at normal risk for BC. ….
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Really loved this story reported on ABC Evening News this past week:  Dog Raises Over $17,000 After Running Marathon for Cancer Research (photo credit)

In 2008, when his new family adopted him, Dozer the Goldendoodle was the only pup left in the litter.
"He was the last of the bunch," said Rosana Dorsett, Dozer's owner. "He was the dog no one wanted ... but he's got a great heart."
It made Dozer kind of an underdog. But fast forward three years to the day of the Maryland Half Marathon -- a 13-mile race for cancer research -- and this pup found his way to the front of the pack. ……
The article includes a great video.  Go watch it!
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H/T to @KentBottles  for the link to this Salon article by Mandy Van Deven:  The neuroscience of disgust
We all have things that disgust us irrationally, whether it be cockroaches or chitterlings or cotton balls. For me, it's fruit soda. It started when I was 3; my mom offered me a can of Sunkist after inner ear surgery. Still woozy from the anesthesia, I gulped it down, and by the time we made it to the cashier, all of it managed to come back up. Although it is nearly 30 years later, just the smell of this "fun, sun and the beach" drink is enough to turn my stomach.
But what, exactly, happens when we feel disgust?
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Check out LITFL weekly review of the “webbed world of emergency medicine and critical care”  -- LITFL Review 029
……… Broome Docs:  Top spot this week heads up north to Casey Parker with his brilliant take off of the hit song “If you are happy and you know it.” If you’ve just come of a weekend of dealing with drunks, punks and personality disorders your bound to be singing this all the way to your next shift. Maybe we could even use the song as a preventative health measure and play it in the waiting room? 
“If you are angry and you know it, punch a pillow.
If you are angry and you know it, punch a pillow.
Don’t punch your wife, or the fridge or a window -
If you are angry and you know it punch a pillow!
If you are sad and you know it, call a friend. ….”
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Check out DinoDoc’s post: Overkill
I saw a lady with a boil. It began as a small red bump which got bigger and harder, then drained white stuff, and was now getting better.
The reason she was worried about it was its location: it was on her breast. This was why the chief complaint officially read, “Breast lump” despite the fact that it was technically no such thing.
I examined her carefully, determining that the pathologic process was indeed confined to the skin and clinically did not involve the actual breast tissue in any way. However because she was of an age for screening mammography, I did take the opportunity to urge her to have it; which she did. The problem arrived with the radiology report:    …………..
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Tomorrow, Wednesday Aug 10th, Dr. Tony Youn will be doing a live online reading from In Stitches via Livestream at 5:30pm ET at www.livestream.com/dryoun.    There will also be a live Q&A where viewers can ask questions and get them answered by Dr. Youn in real time.  Dr. Yong blogs at Celebrity Cosmetic Surgery and can be followed on twitter:  @TonyYounMD.  (photo credit)
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I recently discovered another sewing blog:  the Dreamstress.  This post is for the sewer and the shoe lover:  Greek key shoes – swoon  (photo credit)
As we all know, I’m really into Greek keys.
My current Greek key  obsession is these evening boots:
……….I like the idea of the shoes, but really, I couldn’t handle them in person.  It’s just too much shoe for me

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Shout Outs

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

Center for Advancing Health (CFAH), Prepared Patient Forum, is the host for this week’s Grand Rounds. You can read this week’s virtual tour edition here (photo credit).

Welcome to Better Health’s Grand Rounds Volume 7, Number 44!
This is our second time hosting Grand Rounds and we’re excited about sharing the posts we received.  The theme of this week’s collection came from a recent Health Affairs blog post by CFAH president, Jessie Gruman, Patient Advocates: Flies In The Ointment Of Evidence-Based Care, which addresses a few of the many challenges of basing health care practices, policies, and decisions on evidence of effectiveness. ……….
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Check out @globalsurgeon paper in July Bulletin of @AmCollSurgeons: Beyond Volunteerism – Augmenting Surgical Care in Resource Limited Settings (pdf file)
Surgical care was recently characterized as “the neglected stepchild of public health.” Critical storages of health care workers throughout the developing world have led to “calls to action” and have reinforced the need for safer surgery. …………..
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H/T to @angryorthopod who tweeted “I liked this reminder from @drpullen for physicians and patients "Don't Trust Dr. Google." http://ow.ly/5Mud6”
I jokingly tell my patients that I am consulting with Dr. Google when I go online in the exam room to find information, but in fact I rarely use the Google search engine to access health care information. …….
When my daughter was in an entrepreneurship program at the University of Portland (e-scholars) I told her of my frustrations with having easy one click access to the best free online medical information I use in the office every day. Together we put up a web site called Exam Room Favorites that is designed to be an easy to use home page for physicians. ………….
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Dr. Rob Lamberts (@doc_rob) was recently a presenter in the CDC Public Health Grand Rounds:   Electronic Health Records: What’s in it for Everyone? (text and video)
Electronic health records (EHRs) allow for the systematic collection and management of patient health information in a form that can be shared across multiple health care settings. …….
This session of Public Health Grand Rounds explored the issues of EHR implementation with particular attention to public and population health while addressing concerns of cost, patient confidentiality, and other challenges. .…….
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This is worth reading/listening to if you missed it on NPR yesterday:  'Twelve Breaths': Lessons From The End Of Life (photo credit)
When life draws to an end, family, caregivers and medical professionals face a flurry of often heartbreaking decisions. Are there any last treatments to try? How much longer can a patient hold on? When is it time to turn off the ventilator — and who gets to decide?  ………….
Lee Gutkin's essay collection, Twelve Breaths a Minute, captures the experiences of doctors, caregivers, family members, 911 dispatchers and others who have learned valuable lessons from witnessing life's final moments.  …………..
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H/T to @MtnMD who tweeted the link to this Huffington Post article: Humpback Whale Puts On Show For Men Who Saved Her (VIDEO)
When Michael Fishbach set out for his day of boating around the beautiful waters of the Sea of Cortez, he probably didn't think that it would be the day he and his friends would become wildlife heroes. As luck would have it, that's exactly what happened…….
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BYU exhibit features African-American quilts (photo credit) (Deseret News article by Carma Wadley):
Quilting has been part of American landscape for centuries, but each culture has taken the art form and made it its own.
The quilts you see in "From Heart to Hand: African American Quilts from the Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts" at the Brigham Young University Museum of Art are "very different from the quilts that many Utahns make," says Paul L. Anderson, MOA curator for the show. Yet, they have a folk-art quality, a homespun charm that makes them appealing, he says. …..