Showing posts with label praise. Show all posts
Showing posts with label praise. Show all posts

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Herr – Designer of His Own Limbs

 Updated 3/2017-- photos and all links (except to my own posts) removed as many no longer active.

Yesterday, I was able to catch the interview on NPR’s Fresh Air of Hugh Herr by Terry Gross:  The Double-Amputee Who Designs Better Limbs  (photo credit)
It’s worth reading or listening to.  Here’s the beginning:
Hugh Herr's legs were amputated below his knees in 1982 after a climbing accident. From his knees down to the floor, he's completely artificial.
"I'm titanium, carbon, silicon, a bunch of nuts and bolts," he tells Fresh Air's Terry Gross. "My limbs that I wear have 12 computers, five sensors and muscle-like actuator systems that able me to move throughout my day."
But Herr doesn't just wear artificial legs. He designs them, too. As the director of the Biomechatronics Group at the MIT Media Lab, Herr and his team are responsible for creating prosthetic devices that feel and act like biological limbs. They are also one of the subjects in Frank Moss' new book, The Sorcerers and Their Apprentices: How the Digital Magicians of the MIT Media Lab are Creating the Innovative Technologies That Will Change Our Lives.
Moss, the former head of the MIT Media Lab, profiles several of the researchers who are working on inventions that could change the way we move, socialize and interact with computers.  ……….


Related posts:
Rejection  (December 1, 2010)
Facing Monday  (January 24, 2011)

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Let’s Paint the World Red

Kudos to all blood donors.  Today is World Blood Donors Day!

Around 92 million blood donations are collected annually from
all types of blood donors (voluntary unpaid, family/replacement and paid). Approximately half of these blood donations are collected in high-income countries, home to 15% of the world’s population.
There are three types of blood donors: voluntary unpaid; family/replacement and paid. Voluntary unpaid blood donors are vital for ensuring a sufficient, stable blood supply.  Kudos to you all!
World wide, the greatest number of donors are younger than 25 year of age  (45% of all donors).  This isn’t the case in the United States.   Here those younger than 25 make up only 22% of all donors.  The age group with the greatest percentage of donors in the U. S. is  the group of  45 to 65 year olds (40%).
World wide, women make up only 40% of all donors.  In the U.S., the division is almost equal:  49.9% men/ 50.1% women.
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The American Red Cross states every two seconds, someone in the United States needs blood.  More than 38,000 blood donations are needed every day.  Because blood can not be manufactured, it take blood donors.
All blood types are needed, but types O-negative, A-negative and B-negative are needed most.
So “let’s paint the world red.”  The world needs new and repeat blood donors to give blood.  Blood is the “gift of life.”

General Guidelines About Blood Donation

You must be healthy and be at least 17 years old. You must weigh at least 110 pounds. "Healthy" means that you feel well and can perform normal activities. Just because you have a chronic condition such as diabetes or high blood pressure does not mean you are un-eligible to donate. "Healthy" in light of a chronic condition means that you are being treated and the condition is under control.
Other aspects of each potential donor's health history are discussed as part of the donation process before any blood is collected. Each donor receives a brief examination during which temperature, pulse, blood pressure and blood count (hemoglobin or hematocrit) are measured.
To learn more blood donation opportunities, visit www.givelife.org or call 1-800-GIVE-LIFE (1-800-448-3543).

Related posts:
The Gift of Life (November 18, 2007)
Give Blood -- It's the Gift of Life  (August 1, 2009)

Monday, May 23, 2011

Customer Service via Twitter

It seems that over the years I have ended up with a different Norton Anti-virus product key for three different computers rather than one for all three.  The renewal emails are staggered through the spring.
This week I decided to tackle the issue and see if I could get it changed.  I visited the website and when I saw the option of contacting them via twitter I did just that.
Twitter worked!
I sent my question to @nortonforumsusa which began an email correspondence.   Within less than 24 hours I had all three computers running Norton 360 Premier under the same product key.
The first contact, TL, even forwarded my question regarding refund or credit from the other two to customer relations rep RV who gave me two options (I chose the credit one).
One reason it worked for me was I did my homework before I contacted them.  I helped them help me by having all three product key numbers available, giving them a working email address, and responded to their questions quickly.
This post is simply meant to be a public expression of gratitude and thanks for how well Norton’s customer service worked.  Thanks to TL and RV.
……
But I will take it further ----
Perhaps hospitals and clinics could use twitter the same way for non-emergency/non-diagnostic/non-treatment issues like billing, scheduling, etc. 
First, a public request for help.  Second, take the help to a private venue (email or phone).

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Shout Outs

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

ePatient Dave is the host for this week’s “TEDx Maastricht” issue of Grand Rounds! You can read this week’s edition here.
Welcome to Grand Rounds for May 10, 2011!
I have a confession: I’m new at this. My initial exposure to Grand Rounds a while back gave me a warped view, and as I worked on this project, I was a little bit graceless. (Those of you who wrote to me about it know what I mean. I meant well…)
This week’s theme is the TEDx Maastricht conference that happened April 4. But first -
These news highlights were submitted:
  • Dr. Ed Pullen’s “Medical blog for the informed patient” is not thrilled about Vimovo, a new drug for osteoarthritis. Pullen believes in letting people know what’s going on behind the scenes. …
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Congratulations to fellow physician/blogger Dr. Chris Coppola (@chriscoppola) who shared this tweet recently:
Some exciting news! 'Coppla: A Pediatric Surgeon in Iraq' has won the 2011 Montaigne Medal, the Eric Hoffer award... http://fb.me/AE0vuaIA
Chris blogs at “Coppola: A Pediatric Surgeon in Iraq”
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Shared on twitter by @EllenRichter “Wonderful way to end Nurses Week! What an honor! "First #Nurse Nominated as Army Surgeon General" http://goo.gl/IJq3A” (photo credit)
Maj. Gen. Patricia Horoho would become the first nurse and the first woman to serve as the Army Surgeon General if the Senate confirms her nomination and simultaneous promotion to lieutenant general, which were announced by Defense Secretary Robert Gates on Tuesday.
Horoho currently serves as Army deputy surgeon general and 23rd chief of the U.S. Army Nurse Corps. …
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Did you every read “The House of God” by Samuel Shem, MD? Fellow blogger @inwhiteink shared a link on twitter to a wonderful essay by Shem: Fiction as Resistance (pdf)
I was a writer before I was a doctor. From an early age I was concerned with suffering and understanding, and I often turned to stories for solace. I loved stories long before I knew they were an essence of good doctoring—shared stories that bring solace, understanding, and healing to others. …... My early answers to the question, “What is healing?” came from these stories. I still have a piece of an envelope on which I copied part of a letter Chekhov wrote to an editor who had criticized his story “Ward Number Six”: “The best of writers are realistic and describe life as it is, but because each line is saturated with the consciousness of its goal, you feel life as it should be in addition to life as it is, and you are captivated by it” (1).
Life as it should be in addition to life as it is. Without
realizing it until many years later, this would become the motor of my writing. ……….
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This past Sunday I caught this interview by CBS Sunday Morning of Christy Turlington discussing her life and her new project “Every Mom Counts

Later the same morning, I saw this tweet from @DrJenGunter
RT “@CTurlington: Pls rd my @HuffingtonPost blog posting"Sacrifices of Motherhood" 4 #MothersDay huff.to/lVYMR4 @everymomcounts”
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Ever wonder what type of tree you have encountered in the park or on a walk? Nick Genes, MD (@blogborygmi) tweeted about a new (free) iPhone app which identifies trees from photos of the leafs from on twitter: For The High-Tech Naturalist: LeafSnap Identifies Leaves Using Your iPhone’s Camera (photo credit)

I’d like an app like this for identify edible wild greens/foliage.
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Just How Dangerous Is Sitting All Day? [INFOGRAPHIC] (photo credit)  --  Remember to get up and move!

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Shout Outs

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

Dr. Pullen is the host for this week’s Grand Rounds! You can read this week’s edition here.
This week for Grand Rounds I asked for submissions of the best work from blogger’s sites in the last week or two, and promised to judge them on Olympic scoring of 0-10.   I also asked readers to submit posts from blogs other than their own (these have a *** after the score), and to agreed to give these submissions extra credit in the scoring.  …….  Thanks for your submissions, and keep up the great work.
Gold Medal for Content goes to  John Goodman’s Health Policy Blog he writes The HMO in Your Future.  He takes to task the march towards ACO’s and suggests that this is far from evidence based.  We do seem to be moving quickly towards ACO’s whatever that really means.   Check out this post at least to hear Aretha Franklin sing I Say a Little Prayer.  ……
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Kim, Emergiblog, is the host of the latest edition of Change of Shift (Vol 5, No 17 & 18)! You can find the schedule and the COS archives at Emergiblog.
Welcome to Change of Shift, the Double Edition!
Between traveling and the ENA Leadership Conference, the last edition Change of Shift was, shall we say, delayed. That’s the bad news.
The good news is I’m combining last week’s CoS edition with this week’s edition.
Be sure to read to the end for an important notice about the future of Change of Shift.
Let’s get started!
**********
Running Wildly pens a post probing the weaknesses in the Bullet Proof armor we use to protect our emotions at work.  ……………
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I am fascinated by story of Grant Achatz. He is a chef who was unfortunate enough to be diagnosed with stage 4 tongue cancer in 2007. In an effort to save his sense of taste, he chose to have chemotherapy and radiation rather than surgery. Even so, the radiation treatments burned his tongue and completely destroyed his taste buds. Go listen and read his interview with NPR --- Grant Achatz: The Chef Who Lost His Sense Of Taste
……Achatz's cancer is now in remission. After his treatment ended, his ability to taste came back — but slowly. His perception of different flavor combinations — sweet, salty, bitter — came back one flavor at a time.
"I started from zero, and the first thing back was sweet," he says. "So my palate developed just as a newborn — but I was 32 years old. So I could understand how flavors were coming back and how they synergized together. ... It was very educational for me. I don't recommend it, but I think it made me a better chef because now I really understand how flavor works." ……….
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I caught this story last week on the ABC evening news and was really impressed by the community who all joined in to help save this man: CPR Marathon: More Than Two Dozen Responders Resuscitate Neighbor for 96 Minutes
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Movin Meat has passed his donation goal of $15,000 for St. Baldrick’s, but if that doesn’t mean your donation wouldn’t be welcome.  I made a small donation, but would love to make a larger one if someone would like to help me help Movin Meat and  purchase this quilt.   Send me an email if you’d like to purchase it, but would like the tax write-off.  We’ll work out the details.
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A  team from Arkansas Children’s Hospital led by Dr. Lisa Buckmiller is on a trip to Kenya.  Their blog Change of Face – Bridging the Gap is chronically the trip. 

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Bartering for Medical Care

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

Earlier this week there was an article in my local newspaper (subscription only for full access) on a family physician in Bono, Arkansas who takes chickens as payment:  Bartering for Care – House calls’ a trade-off.
In lieu of payment, patients at the Bono Barter Clinic can exchange a variety of things such as produce or labor for medical services on Thursdays. House devotes the other four days of the workweek to his regular family practice - the House Medical Clinic - both practices in a former church along U.S. 63 between Bono and Jonesboro.
Of note is that this is 20% or less of his workweek, as the bartering only takes place on Thursdays.  As we all know, our utilities don’t allow us to pay via bartering.  Neither do the medical supply companies we purchase syringes, needles, drugs (ie lidocaine, vaccines, etc), and bandages from.
Still I do commend Dr. John House.  He is strict about certain rules which is also important to note.  The barter clinic won’t submit a bill to your insurance if you happen to have coverage.  Nor will they prescribe narcotics.
KAIT.com has a full access story:  Medical clinic allows patients to barter for care
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An amednews story from Jan 12, 2009 noted:  Trading for treatment: Bartering makes a comeback.  The article discusses the rules of bartering which will keep the IRS happy and makes suggestions to make bartering work for your practice.
  • Have a willing business partner. 
  • Find the right trade partner.
  • Keep your percentage of barter patients low.
  • Have an agreement in writing.
  • Make sure values are equal on both sides of the trade.
  • Follow Medicare rules.
  • Follow IRS rules. 
  • Keep good records.

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Some Resources for Fit in 10

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.

The University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture Cooperative Extension Service has produced a series of workout DVD’s, handouts, and postures. LaVona S. Traywick, professor of gerontology, is largely responsible for the information. Even though these are aimed at those of us over 50, I feel they include good information for all ages.
It is important to continue your normal exercise program during the holiday season. It will not only help keep your from gaining weight during this time, it will help with the stress that often comes with the season.
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Increasing Physical Activity as We Age: Exercise Recommendations (FSFCS30 pdf)
The hardest part of exercising for many is getting started, but when you think about fitness goals in 10-minute segments, it doesn’t seem as daunting.
Increasing Physical Activity as We Age: Fit in Ten (volunteer leader training guide, pdf)
Fact Sheets Handouts (many with diagrams of the exercises):
Increasing Physical Activity as We Age: Balance (FSFCS31 pdf)
Increasing Physical Activity as We Age: Endurance (FSFCS32 pdf)
Increasing Physical Activity as We Age: Strength Training (FSFCS33 pdf)
Increasing Physical Activity as We Age: Stretching (FSFCS34 pdf)
Increasing Physical Activity as We Age: Strength Training with Stretch Tubes (FSFCS36 pdf)

Poster Stretch it Out: Strength Training with Stretch Tubes (pdf)


Theses must be ordered, not available for free:
Hit the Floor: Strength Training on an Exercise Mat (poster, MP493, $3)
Get on the Ball: Strength Training with a Stability Ball (poster MP494, $3)
Fit in 10 DVD Video (DVDFCS10, $10)

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, July 20, 2010

Shout Outs

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

Captain Atopic is the host for this week’s Grand Rounds.  It’s a musical edition, “With a Little Help From My Friends.”  You can read this week’s edition here.
Welcome to another edition of Grand Rounds! This week, Grand Rounds 6:43 pays tribute to our friends, with a little help from Messrs Lennon and McCartney (with Ringo on vocals...)
What would you think if I sang out of tune,
Would you stand up and walk out on me.
Lend me your ears and I'll sing you a song,
And I'll try not to sing out of key.
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Thanks to @gastromom for the heads up on this NYTimes article:  Guns in Frail Hands
She is a 90-year-old widow with mild Alzheimer’s disease, and her son is begging her, for safety’s sake, to give up something she considers essential to her independence and sense of control.
“You can’t take it away from me,” she told him recently. “It’s all I’ve got.”
This may sound like a classic confrontation with an elderly mother who won’t give up her car. But it’s in fact about a loaded .38 caliber handgun that she keeps wrapped in a scarf in her top dresser drawer in a Southern California retirement community…..
Like cars, guns symbolize independence and individualism to many Americans. In states where gun ownership is a way of life, the elderly population is as likely as anyone to be armed and, in the view of many family members and professionals who care for them, possibly dangerous. ……………..
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Fellow med-blogger Sterile Eye has one of his photos in this Legions Magazine article by Sharon Adams:   Then And Now – Medical
From Carbolic Acid to Antibiotics
Today, nobody expects anyone to die of a broken leg, having a baby or from suffering a minor wound. But 150 years ago, these could be death sentences. Broken legs and wounded arms were often amputated, and nearly half of all amputees died. Childbed fever was the second most likely cause of death of women of childbearing age.
Infection was a major killer until Louis Pasteur discovered the connection between bacteria and disease in the mid-1800s. Some physicians like England’s Joseph Lister (yes, the mouthwash was named for him), embraced the idea of keeping patients’ environment—and their doctors and the equipment they use—clean in order to prevent transmission of germs. In 1865, Lister began spraying wounds, tools and the patient with carbolic acid to kill germs……….
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A tweet from @DrJenGunter:  “Study at UCSF looking to recruit moms carrying babies with spina bifida - http://tinyurl.com/3adz9of”
….. Recently, some doctors have started operating to close the defect during pregnancy, in hopes that protecting the spinal cord as early as possibly will minimize injury. However, it is really not known if it is better to operate on a baby with spina bifida during pregnancy or immediately after birth. The National Institutes of Health is currently enrolling pregnant mothers carrying a baby with spina bifida in a study called MOMS (management of myelomeningocele study) to answer that very question……
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ABC News’ Person of the Week this past week: Surgery on Sunday-- Doctors Give Free Health Care to the Uninsured
It's Sunday and Dr. Andrew Moore isn't taking a day off in his Lexington, Kentucky, neighborhood. Instead, he scrubs in and spends his day tending to a carpenter's torn ligament and removing another man's hernia. Moore does all of this for free.
Person of the Week Stan Brock has provided free health care for 25 years………..
Moore founded Surgery on Sunday in 2005. It's a nonprofit organization where doctors and nurses volunteer their services for free the third Sunday of every month, working in donated surgical space at Lexington Surgery Center.
Together, they are this week's "World News" person of the week……………
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TBTAM has been interviewed by Womens Health.gov
I was privileged to be the featured interview this month at the Spotlight on Women's Health series at Womenshealth.gov, the website of the Office of Women's Health. Thanks to the editors for their thoughtful questions and  for the opportunity to speak to women about HPV, healthy living and, of course, cooking!

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I started another blog devoted only to my handwork:  Ramona’s Handwork.  I don’t want to loose my non-medical friends from this blog, but neither do I want to “frighten” them with images from some of my medical posts.  So if you only want to see my handwork, then please bookmark my new blog
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Dr Anonymous’ BTR show will be on summer break until late August.

Upcoming shows (9pm ET)
7/29: Reports from 4th year Student Kevin Bernstein and 3rd year FamMed Resident Gerry Tolbert at 2010 AAFP Resident and Student Conference
8/5: Pre-Med Student Erin Breedlove
8/12: Pre-Med Student @InsaneMo
8/19: 4th Year Med Student @DrJonathan
8/26: Dr. A Show 3rd Anniversary

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Shout Outs

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

Dr. Elaine Schattner of Medical Lessons is the host for this week’s Grand Rounds. It’s the “customer service in healthcare” edition. You can read this week’s edition here.
Learning about medicine is a lifelong endeavor whether you’re a patient, a doctor, a caregiver, a hospital administrator or, perhaps, even an insurance company executive. In today’s Grand Rounds, we’ve an array of eleven perspectives that, directly or indirectly, bear on the suggested theme of education.
If there’s a motif that emerged unsolicited this week, it’s empathy, a term highlighted in the titles of two submitted posts:
In Glass Hospital, Dr. John Schumann considers what motivates health care workers in a thoughtful post, Finding Empathy. Schumann, an internist and medical educator at the University of Chicago, suggests that doctors and nurses need to re-encounter and re-engage with empathy to continually find meaning in their work………
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Keith, Digital Doorway, is the host of the latest edition of Change of Shift (Vol 4, No 26) !   You can find the schedule and the COS archives at Emergiblog. (photo credit)
Well, after a long hiatus, I'm finally hosting Change of Shift once again, and I'm happy to do so from the comfort of our new home here in Santa Fe, New Mexico! (For those of you unfamiliar with Change of Shift, it is a nursing blog carnival wherein nurses from around the blogosphere are featured in an "online magazine" that is hosted on a different nursing blog every two weeks.)
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A truly heartwarming story from CNN:  Soprano serenades doctors after lung transplant by Ashley Fantz.
Charity Tillemann-Dick,  27, had a bilateral lung transplant done at Cleveland Clinic in September 2009.  She had been diagnosed with Idiopathic Pulmonary Hypertension in 2004.  What a beautiful voice!
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Jill of All Trades, MD has written a  wonderful post -- 5 “Bueno” Tips on How to Learn Medical Spanish.  She shares how she did so:
…….Thankfully, and perhaps somewhat miraculously, I now very rarely need an interpreter. Seriously, I think the last time I used one was “meses” (months) ago. I cannot even remember when.
So “como” (how) did I do it? Here’s my advice:
1. Find a good medical Spanish book: There are not that many. Buy the best one. And read the entire thing, word-for-word. Underline as you go. Then, re-read the underlined items from the first round. ……….
……………………………..
Jeffrey Parks, MD, otherwise known as Buckeye Surgeon, has written a warning post which you should all read:  What Does Dave Weigel have to do with Sermo?
…….Someone read the post and decided to break protocol. Ultimately, several of his off the record email posts were published for the general public on both the Daily Caller and FishbowlDC. Weigel subsequently resigned his position as a writer/blogger for the Washington Post………
What if someone obtained access to Sermo for nefarious purposes? Perhaps a physician-turned-hospital administrator who went looking for dirt on a trouble-making internist. Or a malpractice attorney who used his brother-in-law's log-on ID to troll for cases……….
………………………………….
I read about Dawn Warmbold recycling plastic bags into sleeping mats for the homeless in my local paper, but their online access is by subscription only.  Fortunately, I found a similar article in the Log Cabin Democrat:  ‘Sleeping mat-ters’ to local group
……..Warmbold has personally created 40 mats and instructed several church groups and organizations on how to create the mats. “The word is spreading like wildfire,” Warmbold said. “The homeless have asked us not to stop making them. There are more homeless than mats to hand out. That’s how much in demand they are.”
Warmbold, also called “the bag lady” has been teaching others how to carry the torch and encouraging them to create circles of their own to produce mats. She created an instructional Youtube video, which has received more than 2,500 views.
The video can be viewed by going to Warmbold’s channel at www.youtube.com/user/dawnw4848.
………………………………..

Dr Anonymous’ BTR show will be on summer break until late August.

Upcoming shows (9pm ET)
Jul-Aug: Summer Break
8/26: Dr. A Show 3rd Anniversary

Sunday, June 20, 2010

Happy Father’s Day!

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

On this Father’s Day, I thought I’d list some men who have been influential in medicine and surgery.
Hippocrates (ca. 460 BC – ca. 370 BC)has been named the Father of Medicine.
In surgery, there are three different men who are often given the title of the Father of Surgery:
Sushruta (600 B.C., from India)
Sushruta, one of the earliest surgeons of the recorded history (600 B.C.) is believed to be the first individual to describe plastic surgery. Sushruta who lived nearly 150 years before Hippocrates vividly described the basic principles of plastic surgery in his famous ancient treatise 'Sushruta Samhita' 1,2 in 600 B.C. 'Sushruta Samhita'(Sushruta's compendium) which is one of the oldest treatise dealing with surgery in the world indicates that he was probably the first surgeon to perform plastic surgical operations.
Alzahrawi:  Father of Surgery (A.D. 936 - 1013)
Al-Zahrawi is known in the West as Albucasis. He wrote Kitab Al Tasrif, a 30-volume medical textbook which included sections on surgery, medicine, orthopedics, ophthalmology, pharmacology, nutrition, etc. The thirtieth treatise, On Surgery and Instruments, is considered the first rational, complete, and illustrated treatment of its subject.
Ambroise Paré (c. 1510 – 20 December 1590)
Ambroise Paré (c. 1510 – 20 December 1590) was a French surgeon. He was the great official royal surgeon for the kings Henry II, Francis II, Charles IX and Henry III and is considered as one of the fathers of surgery. He was a leader in surgical techniques and battlefield medicine, especially the treatment of wounds. He was also an anatomist and the inventor of several surgical instruments.
Gizabeth, Methodical Madness, may correct me, but the Father of (modern) Pathology is considered to be Rudolf Ludwig Karl Virchow (13 October 1821 – 5 September 1902).
was a German doctor, anthropologist, pathologist, prehistorian, biologist and politician, known for his advancement of public health. Referred to as "the father of modern pathology," he is considered one of the founders of social medicine.
Vijay, Scan Man’s Notes, may correct me, but the Father of (diagnostic) Radiology is considered to be Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen (March 27, 1845 – February 10, 1923).
was a German physicist of the University of Würzburg. On November 8, 1895, he produced and detected electromagnetic radiation in a wavelength range today known as X-rays or Röntgen Rays, an achievement that earned him the first Nobel Prize in Physics in 1901. He is also considered the father of Diagnostic Radiology, the medical field in which radiation is used to produce images to diagnose injury and disease.

Happy Father’s Day to fathers everywhere!

Monday, April 26, 2010

Dr. Goldwyn’s “Surgeon”

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

After learning about Dr. Robert Goldwyn’s death, I pulled out his book “The Operative Note:  Collected Editorials” to reread (published in August 1992).  I’d like to share a few with you over the next weeks/months.
The first is entitled “Surgeon”
On a recent trip to Hawaii, I learned that in the Polynesian dialect spoken there, the word for surgeon is kauka oki:  doctor (kauka) who cuts (oki).  While some of us surgeons might resent such a graphic, “cut and dry” definition, we cannot deny its verity.  No matter how we may slice it, a surgeon is a doctor who makes incisions.  In fact, the origin of the word surgery is Greek, from cheir, meaning “hand,” and ergon, meaning “work.”  That surgeons work with their hands did not always bring honor.  Centuries ago, one recalls that those who cut on others, with their permission, generally held a lower status than those who eschewed the knife.
At the bottom were the barbers, and slightly above them, the surgeons.  In England in 1462, the Guild of Barbers became the Company of Barbers, and under Henry VIII, the Barber Company was united with the smaller Guild of Surgeons to form the United Barber-Surgeon Company.  In commenting on Henry VIII’s role in this episode, Garrison cites the painting by the younger Holbein, the court painter:  “Henry VIII—huge, bluff, and disdainful—in the act of handing the statute to Vicary [Thomas Vicary, First Master of the United Barber-Surgeon Company], in company with fourteen other surgeons on their knees before the monarch, who does not condescend even to look at them.”1  Perhaps Henry was irate at having to leave his dinner table and his newest wife.
The metamorphosis from the lowly barber to the glamorized surgeon has been long.  I am sure that Henry VIII did not envision the consequences of his royal decree.  The seesaw of history is marvelous as long as you are on the upswing.  The rise of the surgeon did not erase the schism (in fact, it may have intensified it) between the so-called thinkers and the doers.  This enmity, although lamentable, is centuries old.  some, however, such as Lanfranchi of Milan (the first to describe concussion of the brain and to distinguish between cancer and hypertrophy of the female breast), did rise above the petty, professional fray.  In his Chirurgia Magna, completed in 1296, he wrote:
  • Why, in God’s name, in our days, is there such a great difference between the physician and the surgeon?  The physicians have abandoned operative procedures to the laity, either, as some say, because they disdain to operate with their hands, or rather, as I think, because they do not know how to perform operations.  Indeed, this abuse is so inveterate that the common people look upon it as impossible for the same person to understand both surgery and medicine.  It ought, however, to be understood that no one can be a good physician who has no idea of surgical operations and that a surgeon is nothing if ignorant of medicine.  In a word, one must be familiar with both departments of Medicine. 2
We do accept the fact today that the best surgeon is one who knows not only how to operate, but when not to.  Harvey Cushing, about the time that he became the first Surgeon-In-Chief of the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, Boston, said in his letter to his counterpart in medicine, Henry Christian:  “I would like to see the day when somebody would be appointed surgeon somewhere who had no hands, for the operative part is the least part of the work.” 3
Cushing, of course, did have hands, good ones, and more important, a superior brain, which he used prodigiously.  His remark was a hyperbole that reflected his correct view of surgery; it must grow from research and basic sciences and from its application to clinical problems.  Surgery, despite the awe it now has (for those who doubt this, see the afternoon “soaps”), represents a failure of nonoperative medicine.  Who would not want to take a pill rather than undergo an operation for cholecystitis, breast cancer, or benign prostatic hypertrophy if the results were the same?  Would not genetic engineering by medication to prevent facial clefts be preferable to repairing them, no matter how meticulous and innovative the surgeon?  The thought that a capsule could safely enlarge or reduce breasts or salve could eliminate Dupuytren’s contracture or a prominent dorsal hump may seem too fanciful even for the most imaginative, yet landing a man on the moon and retrieving him without mishap has long been a fait accompli.  However, since medical Shangri-La is many years hence, we heirs of Pare will be continuing our manual ministrations, our barbers’ burden.
References
1.  Garrison, F.H.  An Introduction into the History of Medicine with Medical Chronology.  Suggestions for Study and Bibliographic Data, 4th Ed.  Philadelphia: Saunders, 1929; reprinted in 1960. Pp. 238-240.
2.  Lanfranchi of Milan.  In M.B. Strauss (Ed.), Familiar Medical Quotations.  Boston: Little, Brown, 1968. P. 583.
3.  Fulton, J.F.  Harvey Cushing:  A Biography.  Springfield, Ill.:  Charles C. Thomas, 1946.  P. 352.

Monday, February 1, 2010

Arkansas Children's Hospital in the News

Let me first remind you that I live in Little Rock so am very proud of this local gem.
Arkansas Children’s Hospital has gotten some good press recently.  One story is from Palestine Children’s Relief Fund:  Iraqi girl has surgery in Arkansas
On January 24, 5-year-old Christine Makboob from Nineveh, Iraq had neurosurgery at Arkansas Children’s Hospital by Dr. Samer Elbabaa. This child was born with a spine deformity called tethered cord, which was causing her significant neurological disorders including incontinence and she could not be adequately treated in her war-torn country.
The above story was given more print in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, but unfortunately you need a paid subscription to read it online.
The following videos are from the Dateline story aired last night which featured several pediatric residents at Arkansas Children’s Hospital.  I am very impressed and agree with Dr. Nancy Synderman about the future of medicine if these residents are any indication.  We are in good hands.






Wednesday, December 16, 2009

“A Day in the Life”

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

I was going to include this yesterday in my “Shout Outs” but was afraid it would get lost in the middle of it all.  The blog, Mothers in Medicine, has done a topic week devoted to “a day in the life.”  The posts have been amazing! 
I included a couple written before the official topic week.  Here is a list.  Enjoy!
  • A random day in my life posted by RH+ (Nov 7, 2009)
  • A Day in the Life posted by Gizabeth Shyder (Nov 26, 2009)
  • How I Spent My Maternity Leave by ZT (Dec 4, 2009)
  • The ebb and flow of an academic neurologist, guest post by AC (Dec 7, 2009)
  • Which Day? posted by T (Dec 7, 2009)
  • Call Day: Internal Medicine Intern , guest post (Dec 7, 2009)
  • One day in my clinician-educator internist's life, last week posted by KC (Dec 8, 2009)
  • Day in the Life of a Middle Aged Full Time Student/Mom/Wife/Friend etc .etc. etc. , guest post by PeggiKaye (Dec 8, 2009)
  • A day at the refugee clinic posted by FreshMD (Dec 9, 2009)
  • A Day in the Life of a Part-Time Pediatrician , guest post (Dec 9, 2009)
  • An Average FD Weekend posted by Fat Doctor (Dec 9, 2009)
  • Day in the life of a physiatrist posted by Fizzy (Dec 9, 2009)
  • A Day in the Life of a Neurosurgeon – SERIOUSLY? , guest post (Dec 10, 2009)
  • A day in the life of a part-time medical oncologist posted by Tempeh (Dec 10, 2009)
  • A Typical Call Day, Ob/Gyn Style posted by dr. whoo? (Dec 10, 2009)
  • A Day in the life of an O&G Registrar mom,  guest post by "Juggler" (Dec 10, 2009)
  • A Medical Student Mother's Day in the Life , guest post by MS3Mommy (Dec 11, 2009)
  • Day in the Life of an Orthodonist, guest post by Anna (Dec 11, 2009)
  • Another Day: The Life of a Clinical Neurologist posted by Artemis (Dec 11, 2009)
  • Day in the Life: Conference with cub #2, guest post by Tigermom (Dec 12, 2009)
  • A day in the life of an MS1 with four kids under age 8, guest post by Indymom (Dec 12, 2009)
  • Premed RN mom's day in the life, guest post by MomRN2Doc1day (Dec 13, 2009)
  • Third-year internal medicine resident, on maternity leave, guest post (Dec 13, 2009)
  • My day last Wednesday posted by JC (Dec 13, 2009)

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

11-11 Campaign – Giving Back to Our Veterans


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

H/T to Dr Wes for alerting me to the 11-11 Campaign.  Our veterans have given much to us over the years and continue to do so.  (photo credit)
This campaign seeks to encourage 11 million of us to give $11.  The monies given will be distributed by Beyond Tribute Coalition to 11 charities that specialize in direct services and/or advocacy for Veterans of all eras and conflicts.
The 11 charities in the coalition include:
  • American Gold Star Mothers
  • Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America
  • NY State for Vets
  • Service Women’s Action Network
  • Student Veterans of America
  • The Bob Woodruff Foundation
  • US VETS
  • Veterans of Modern Warfare
  • VFW Foundation
  • Vietnam Veterans of America
  • Wounded Warrior Project

My heartfelt thanks to all veterans and their families
on this Veterans Day.

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Medical News of Arkansas Article

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

Steve Brawner interviewed me over a month ago for an article on medical bloggers in Arkansas. I received my copy of the Medical News of Arkansas with the article (pdf) this past week. The article is titled “Docs Online: Medical Bloggers Enjoy Pluses, Avoid Perils.”
He focuses on four bloggers from Arkansas. I knew of two of the others (R. W. Donnell, MD and Victoria Powell, RN). The other one is a female pathologist who lives here in Little Rock too. I am the forth blogger.
Here are the other three:
R. W. Donnell, MD is a hospitalist in NW Arkansas. His blog is called “Notes from Dr RW.” He has been blogging since July 2005. His blog “helps keep his reading current on clinical medical topics and public policy issues.”
Victoria Powell, RN is a nurse consultant in Benton, Arkansas. Her blog is “VP-Medical.” She began her blog in October 2007. As she puts it, “It allows me a commercial opportunity without shouting from the rooftop, ‘Hey, look what I can do’.”
Elizabeth Schneider, MD is a Baptist Health pathologist, Little Rock, Arkansas. Her blog is “Methodical Madness.” She began her blog on election day 2008. Her blog is mostly personal, “a way for her to release some creative energies after a day of looking through the microscope.”
I know of another physician blogger from Arkansas, but she wasn’t interviewed. Jen is a 2nd year radiology resident at UAMS. She began blogging in June 2006. Her blog used to be called “And Then Sum” but recently changed to “This I Write.” Her blog is mostly personal with a little medical.
I'm a mom to three rambunctious boys, a wife to a wonderful man, and a radiology resident. So, I basically write about my twisted world of medicine and motherhood.
And did you know that Paul Levy, Running a Hospital, has an Arkansas connection? That’s right, he used to live and work in Arkansas (Director, Arkansas Department of Energy).
Anyone know of any others? Physician, nurse, EMT, etc bloggers in Arkansas? I would love to know.

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Scar-free surgery?

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

H/T to MedGadget for bring this research to my attention.  Wow!  I know it is not ready for primetime, but still – wow!  Currently, this isn’t the case (no scar-free tummy tucks or facelifts), but the possibility may exist in the future.
Michael Berger over at Nanowerk profiles the work of Japanese scientists who created adhesive ultrathin "nanosheets" which are able to bind tissue together.  Their goal was to create a material that can help avoid suturing or stapling of fragile tissue during surgery.   (photo credit)
Shinji Takeoka tells Nanowerk. "We found that our ultra-thin PLLA nanosheet has an excellent sealing efficacy for gastric incision as a novel wound dressing that does not require adhesive agents. Furthermore, the sealing operation repaired the incision completely without scars and tissue adhesion. This approach would constitute an ideal candidate for an alternative to conventional suture/ligation procedures, from the perspective not only of a minimally invasive surgical technique but also reduction of operation times."


Takeoka and colleagues have published their findings in a recent paper in Advanced Materials ("Free-Standing Biodegradable Poly(lactic acid) Nanosheet for Sealing Operations in Surgery").

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Shout Outs

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

Kim at Emergiblog is this week's host of Grand Rounds. You can read it here (photo credit).  A Cracking Grand Rounds!
Welcome to the latest edition of Grand Rounds, the weekly compilation of the best of the medical blogosphere!
Our theme this week comes to us courtesy of that loveable, wacky duo, Wallace and Gromit!

Dr Nancy Brown writes about  The Newest Eating Disorder: Orthorexia Nervosa.
Orthorexia is a term coined by Dr. Steven Bratman. “Ortho” simply means straight or correct, while “orexia” refers to appetite. Orthorexia nervosa refers to a nervous obsession with eating proper foods. While anorexia nervosa is an obsession with the quantity, orthorexia is an obsession with the quality of the food consumed.

While on food, how about checking out this NY Times article “101 Simple Salads for the Season” By Mark Bittman.  (photo credit)
SUMMER may not be the best time to cook, but it’s certainly among the best times to eat. Toss watermelon and peaches with some ingredients you have lying around already, and you can produce a salad that’s delicious, unusual, fast and perfectly seasonal. 


More on eating -- Dr. Val Offers ABC News Secrets To Long-Term Weight Loss.  Good for you Dr Val!!!  It takes diet and exercise.

Check out Dr Wes’ “careful exam” – a Pepsi is not always a Pepsi.

Dr Graham Walker talks about “never events” in his post “Fixing Medical Err-ERs”
The NYT has an Op-Ed by a former head of the National Transportation Safety Board talking about reforming the health care system and reducing medical errors. He cites the To Err Is Human Institute of Medicine report suggesting 98,000 annual deaths and billions of dollars due to medical errors, and notes:

H/T to Clinical Cases and Images – Blog for TED Talks: Daniel Kraft invents a better way to harvest bone marrow

Remember the crazy quilt I made back in  May for entry into the “Crazy for Quilts” contest?  Well, the quilts are making their rounds for exhibit.  If you get a chance, I hope you will go to one of them.  From an email I received:
Our next exhibit venue will be the Virginia Quilt Museum from August 17-September 11, 2009. Since we had such an incredible response to this year’s contest (86 quilts total) the VQM will not be able to hang all of the quilts.
On September 24, all of the quilts will be exhibited in a one-day presentation in Asheville, NC, at the AAQ’s home base- 125 S. Lexington Avenue. The exhibit will be co-presented by the AAQ and HandMade in America, a regional nonprofit that leases us office space.
Dr Rob is now doing podcast as the “House Call Doctor”  giving “quick and dirty tips” to help you take charge of your health.   You can find the list of his podcasts here.  Enjoy!
                      
This week Dr Anonymous returns from taking July off.  Come joint us.  The show starts at 9 pm EST.
Upcoming Dr. A Shows 
8/13: The Hollums Adoption
8/20: Dr. Rob & House Call Doctor podcast
8/27: Dr. A Show 2nd Anniversary & BlogWorldExpo
9/3 : Dr. A Show (9:30pmET)

Monday, August 3, 2009

Emeriblog is 4!!!!

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

On August 3rd, 2005  Kim's blog Emergiblog entered the blog world.  Today she starts her 5th year in the medical blogging community.    Along the way she started Change of Shift (the nursing blog carnival). 
One of my first “contacts” with Kim was as a new blogger in 2007.  She had just turned 50 (a few weeks ahead of me) and had this great T-shirt on her blog (photo credit).  I wanted to know where to get one for myself.  I emailed her and she answered me.  I was so impressed that someone so “big” in the blog world would bother with me.
That’s Kim, a classic.  I am honored to “know” her.  I can’t wait to meet her at Blog World Expo in October.
Happy Blog Birthday, Kim!

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Shout Outs

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

Dr Joseph Kim, Medicine and Technology, is this week's host of Grand Rounds. You can read it here.
Welcome to Grand Rounds Vol. 5 No. 43 @ Medicine & Technology. The theme is this week is to look at different ways technology is changing the world of healthcare. I am your host this week and I hope you'll enjoy some of these interesting stories.

The latest edition of Change of Shift (Vol 4, No 1) is hosted by Kim who started it all three years ago! You can find the schedule and the COS archives at Emergiblog. 
Welcome to the anniversary edition of Change of Shift!
The nursing blog carnival celebrates it’s third anniversary (and the beginning of its fourth year) here at Emergiblog (aka: “home base”).
CoS has been hosted by 33 different blogs, including 31 nurses and two physicians.
(The new year begins with a new logo! I finally found out how to make one that wasn’t a banner!)

H/T to @medpagetoday  New Surgeon General named: Dr. Regina Benjamin >> The Doctor Is (Finally) In: Obama To Name Regina Benjamin For Surgeon General.  You can read her biography here (photo credit).
Regina Benjamin practices as a country doctor in rural Alabama. As founder and CEO of the Bayou La Batre Rural Health Clinic, Dr. Regina Benjamin is making a difference to the underserved poor in a small fishing village on the Gulf Coast of Alabama. It is a town of about 2500 people, about 80 percent of her patients live below the poverty level, and Dr. Benjamin is their only physician.

Dr Val Jones, Better Health, has organized a Blogger-Politician Healthcare Reform Discussion At National Press Club.  The event takes place this Friday, July 17, 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.   Check out the list of attendees:
Keynote: Representative Paul Ryan, (R-WI), House Budget Committee Ranking member
Moderator: Rea Blakey, Emmy award-winning health reporter and news anchor, previously with ABC, CNN, and now with Discovery Health
Host: Val Jones, M.D., CEO and Founder of Better Health
Policy Expert: Robert Goldberg, Ph.D., co-founder and vice president of the Center for Medicine in the Public Interest (CMPI)
Primary Care Panelists:
Kevin Pho, M.D., Internist and author of KevinMD
Rob Lamberts, M.D., Med/Peds specialist and author of Musings of a Distractible Mind
Alan Dappen, M.D., Family Physician and Better Health contributor
Valerie Tinley, N.P., Nurse Practitioner and Better Health contributor
Specialty Care Panelists:
Kim McAllister, R.N., Emergency Medicine nurse and author of Emergiblog
Westby Fisher, M.D., Cardiac Electrophysiologist and author of Dr.Wes
Rich Fogoros, M.D., Cardiologist and author of CovertRationingBlog And Fixing American Healthcare
Jim Herndon, M.D., past president of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons and Better Health contributor

H/T to @lesmorgan  End-of-Life Decision Making - A Summary and Primer: In the March 2009 issue of Clinics in Chest Medicine.
Siegel covers rationing & triage, futility, advance directives, and surrogates. But the bulk of the article is devoted to practical advice on good communication, discussing prognosis, and successful family meetings.

Dr Rob is now doing podcast as the “House Call Doctor”  giving “quick and dirty tips” to help you take charge of your health.   You can find the list of his podcasts here.  Enjoy!

H/T to @Gurdonark  for the link on “tips for photographing butterflies” 
4 - Keep your camera parallel to the butterfly’s body  You only get one plane of complete sharpness, so you always want to put as much of your subject in this plane as possible. With butterflies, you’ll want its body and wings tack sharp, so make sure your camera’s sensor is parallel to them.
6 - Shoot when the butterfly is frontlit by the sun  To highlight the butterfly’s contrast and help you get a sharp photo, photograph them when they’re frontlit by the sun. Remember: always keep an eye on the sun.

 
I just love this picture!  It is a small 150 lb black bear (photo credit) seen in west Little Rock over the weekend.  It passed through the yard of the parents of one of my brother-in-laws. 
The black bear, tranquilized by a dart from wildlife officers, was eventually transported to a wilder neighborhood. But not before he gave a bird feeder a work over. More pictures and video here.


This week Dr Anonymous will be taking July off.