Thursday, December 31, 2009

Health News of the Day

Health News of the Day is a daily summary made from the selected links I post on Twitter. It is in a bullet points format with links to the original sources which include 350 RSS feeds that produce about 2,500 items per day:

Coffee May Have Some Health Perks, but Can Brew Trouble in People With Certain Conditions. Coffee is the second most widely traded commodity in the world, after oil http://bit.ly/7SpcHy

Zinc Fingers May be a New Way to Edit DNA and Give Hope for Gene Therapy. Zinc fingers can be deployed as a word processing system for cutting and pasting genetic text (DNA) http://bit.ly/6eATaP

"A burger or fried chicken with a side of diabetes?" How fast food increases BMI and diabetes risk:  Women who ate fast food burgers or fried chicken twice a week were 40-70% more likely to develop type 2 diabetes http://bit.ly/6gmq3c
Wedding ring dermatitis: Till Dermatitis Do Us Part http://bit.ly/5aXM3c

Never too late to quit smoking: heart attack survivors who quit live longer than those who keep puffing away http://bit.ly/6HNZ6e

Household Transmission of 2009 H1N1 Influenza: contacts less than 18 years of age were twice as susceptible as 19-50 yr http://bit.ly/4wixBm

Activated Protein C for Sepsis: clinical benefit and recommendations are controversial. http://bit.ly/6SfYj0

How McDonald's makes sure its burgers are safe: a glimpse into the world of extreme food safety - USA Today http://bit.ly/7aaz0K 

Medical news tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source, links, etc. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support. Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

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on Twitter:

Social Media Related Tweets and Insights

From my Twitter account:

Picturing the Past 10 Years - NYTimes http://bit.ly/5UQKJB

How to use social networking in your doctor job hunt - AMA News http://bit.ly/5zVDyQ

Free courses from top universities now easier to find: http://bit.ly/82UERR

102-year old Merle Phillips decided to retire. This gives her more time to write that 11th book: http://bit.ly/4TDgou

Top Google Apps in 2009 - a list of Google services that were launched or were significantly improved in 2009 http://bit.ly/4rpebz

Who did Google make cry this year? 9 startup dreams & industries Google crushed in 2009 http://bit.ly/4ZGP3k

Most popular "Top 5" of everything topics for 2009 by LifeHacker http://bit.ly/5ki2tC


Dr. RW started his new edition of Top 10 issues in hospital medicine for 2009 http://bit.ly/7fQBhp, see the 2008 edition: http://bit.ly/6JViT9  

Tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source, links, etc. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support. Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

What is the radiation exposure from full-body scans used for airport security screening?

There are 2 types of full-body scanner machines that use "weak" X-rays and radio waves respectively:

- Backscatter radiation X-ray full-body scanners. The image looks like a chalk drawing (shown right).

- "Millimeter wave" (radio wave) full-body scanners. The image looks like a fuzzy photo negative.

Backscatter radiation X-ray full-body scanners

The older type of full-body scanners use so-called backscatter radiation to scan the entire body to detect foreign objects. Passengers will be directed to stand against a refrigerator-size backscatter machine as a "pencil-thin" X-ray beam rapidly scans them to produce textured "charcoal outlines" of their bodies. The backscatter uses a narrow, low-intensity X-ray beam that scans the entire body at a high speed. The X-ray is not strong enough to penetrate much beyond the skin, so it cannot find weapons that may be hidden in body cavities.

The amount of radiation used during this scan is equal to 15 minutes of exposure to natural background radiation such as the sun's rays. One scan emits less than 10 microrem, the unit used to measure radiation. Comparably, an hour on an airplane at a high altitude exposes a passenger to 300 microrem, and the average person is exposed to 1,000 microrem of radiation over the course of a normal day.

Thirty hours of airplane travel is the equivalent of one chest X-ray (CXR) - an important health warning for frequent flyers.

A backscatter X-ray scan gives a person as much radiation as he or she would get from two minutes of flying in an airplane at 30,000 feet. A traveler would have to undergo more than a thousand scans in a year to equal one standard chest X-ray.

Dr. Albert J. Fornace Jr., an expert in molecular oncology at Georgetown University Medical Center, said such a low dose was inconsequential, even for pregnant women. “Obviously, no radiation is even better than even a very low level,” Dr. Fornace said. “But this is trivial.” But David J. Brenner, a professor of radiation oncology at Columbia University, said that even though the risk for any individual was extremely low, he would still avoid it.

"Millimeter wave" (radio wave) full-body scanners

The newer type of scanners, called a "millimeter wave" machine, doesn't use radiation. It uses electromagnetic waves to create an image based on energy reflected from the body. According to the TSA these devices deliver 10,000 times less energy than a person's cell phone.

The millimeter wave machine works like this: A person walks into a large portal that resembles a that resembles a glass elevator (9 feet tall and 6 feet wide), pauses and lifts his or her arms while the machine takes two scans using radio waves. The scans take 1.8 seconds, and it takes about a minute for the image to appear on a computer screen in a separate location.

Privacy concerns

The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) promises no one will see the revealing images except trained security agents staring at computer screens in a nearby room. The body scans will be deleted after 12 seconds.

Special “privacy” software intentionally blurs the image, creating an outline of a body that is clear enough to see a collarbone, bellybutton or weapon, but flattens details of revealing contours.

Lawyers for the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) have raised objections, calling the X-ray scan a “virtual strip-search.”

References:

Airport Scanner Radiation Risks Are Minimal, Government Report Says - NYTimes, 2012.
TSA to Conduct New Study on Safety of X-Ray Body Scanners http://goo.gl/r6Kfl
Dutch to use full body scans for U.S. flights. CNN.
New Airport X-Rays Scan Bodies, Not Just Bags. NYT.
For their eyes only? Boston Globe.
Manufacturer says full body scanners at airports are a valuable tool in fighting terror. The Plain Dealer.
Body-scan machine eyed for airports. AP.
Manchester airport trials naked-image security scans. Guardian.
Radiation risk low with whole-body airport scanners. Reuters, 2010.
New Airport Scanners: Radiation Risk Tiny. WebMD, 2010.
Image source: Wikipedia, backscatter X-ray, US Transportation Security Administration part of U.S. Department of Homeland Security, public domain.

Read more on a Kindle:

Health News of the Day

Health News of the Day is a daily summary made from the selected links I post on Twitter. It is in a bullet points format with links to the original sources which include 350 RSS feeds that produce about 2,500 items per day:

Hemoglobin A1C Blood Test Now Recommended for Diabetes Diagnosis http://bit.ly/5WJIfO

The Middle-Aged Heart: The level of LDL cholesterol jumps an average of 10% in the years around menopause http://bit.ly/6m5DVc

Cardiologists sue U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Sebelius over Medicare fee cuts http://bit.ly/4njr31
Wedding ring dermatitis: Till Dermatitis Do Us Part http://bit.ly/5aXM3c

How McDonald's makes sure its burgers are safe: a glimpse into the world of extreme food safety - USA Today http://bit.ly/7aaz0K 

Is Twitter a "must" for doctors, asks Medscape http://bit.ly/5s14Or - No, it is not.

"Medical errors kill 98,000 people a year: 98000reasons.org, calls it equivalent to two 737s crashing every day" - NYT http://bit.ly/8DiU8F

NYT on Anguish of Litigation - Doctor: "My mood turned from stoic resignation to a toxic muck of apathy and irritation" http://bit.ly/4HBQlp -- RT @rlbates "Why we need tort reform: Read comment #10 on the NYT article. Wow." http://bit.ly/5hIh2Z  

Medical news tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source, links, etc. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support. Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

Follow me on Twitter:

CNN Video: School Lunch Nutrition Worse Than Fast-Food Restaurants



From USA Today:

"McDonald's, Burger King and Costco, for instance, are far more rigorous in checking for bacteria and dangerous pathogens. They test the ground beef they buy five to 10 times more often than the USDA tests beef made for schools during a typical production day.

For chicken, the USDA has supplied schools with thousands of tons of meat from old birds that might otherwise go to compost or pet food. Called "spent hens" because they're past their egg-laying prime, the chickens don't pass muster with Colonel Sanders— KFC won't buy them — and they don't pass the soup test, either. The Campbell Soup Company says it stopped using them a decade ago based on "quality considerations.

We simply are not giving our kids in schools the same level of quality and safety as you get when you go to many fast-food restaurants."

References:
School Lunch Nutrition Worse Than Fast-Food, Says USA Today. NPR Health Blog.
Fast-food standards for meat top those for school lunches. USA Today.
"Kids only have 20 minutes to eat their lunches at school, so they'd automatically eat the sweet snacks first". CNN. http://goo.gl/yPxNQ

Social Media Related Tweets and Insights

From my Twitter account:

"20 Essential Gmail Tips You Probably Don't Use (but Should!)" http://bit.ly/7Bb45c

"Complete Guide to Free Kindle Books" http://bit.ly/5aV8wH

Free Online Storage Feature-by-Feature Comparison Chart http://bit.ly/6Ri9AQ

Official Twitter buttons: Choose the button you’d like to include in your website http://bit.ly/40pq2l

The Best Twitter Apps for your Mobile Phone http://bit.ly/8NZPff

Deepak Chopra: "It used to annoy me to be called the king of woo woo" http://bit.ly/8xRvIE

Doctors in satirical prints and cartoons (MJA) http://bit.ly/6783OA     

Tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source, links, etc. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support. Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Why scientific journals retract published articles?

From The Lancet:

Editors have a duty to maintain the integrity of the scientific record.

An analysis of 312 retractions from 1988 to 2008 at the Peer Review Congress in Vancouver, BC, Canada revealed the main reasons for retraction:

- fabrication (5%)
- falsification (4%)
- plagiarism (16%)
- redundant publication (17%)
- disputed authorship or data ownership (5%)
- inaccurate or misleading reporting (4%)
- honest research errors (28%)
- non-replicable findings (11%)
- not stated findings (9%)

Overall, 42% of retractions were due to scientific misconduct. In an earlier analysis, 27% of 395 articles were retracted because of misconduct.

References:
COPE's retraction guidelines. The Lancet, Volume 374, Issue 9705, Pages 1876 - 1877, 5 December 2009.

Related:

Health News of the Day

Health News of the Day is a daily summary made from the selected links I post on Twitter. It is in a bullet points format with links to the original sources which include 350 RSS feeds that produce about 2,500 items per day:

Heart Risk of Obesity Greater Than Previously Thought http://bit.ly/7bXJzQ

Study Debunks Notion of 'Healthy Obese' Man - Heart risks may take years to show up, but they're there http://bit.ly/7mymdQ 

Shortage of organs forces transplant surgeons to use "less than ideal" organs, sometimes leading to death - CNN http://bit.ly/7XecJF

Interactive Respiratory Physiology - Free online course by Johns Hopkins - From 1996... http://bit.ly/6mYk86

Shel Israel about his DM2: "Insulin was the enemy & if it won, I would have to concede that diabetes was defeating me" http://bit.ly/6iTMd1
 
Medical news tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source, links, etc. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support. Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

Follow me on Twitter:

Monday, December 28, 2009

Health News of the Day

Health News of the Day is a daily summary made from the selected links I post on Twitter. It is in a bullet points format with links to the original sources which include 350 RSS feeds that produce about 2,500 items per day:

Holiday Spikes - Rates of invasive pneumococcal disease in the U.S. increase dramatically during winter holidays http://bit.ly/8BWuV2

Gene findings support for a causal role of Lp(a) lipoprotein in coronary disease http://bit.ly/7T0t7p

Early-repolarization in the inferior ECG leads asociated with an increased risk of death from cardiac causes http://bit.ly/5sSeUE

People with low education were 31% more likely to suffer a heart attack than those with education beyond high school http://bit.ly/8KtD69

Omega-3 fatty acids decrease risk of progression of age-related macular degeneration (AMD) by 30% http://bit.ly/5issXx

20 ways to get healthier for free - CNN http://bit.ly/8zC8QU - Not all of them are evidence-based of course but a few can be useful.

5 tips for getting what you need from your doctor - CNN http://bit.ly/pIzq      

“The Checklist Manifesto” - A Hospital How-To Guide That Mother Would Love - NYT http://bit.ly/8ekPqZ

Medical news tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source, links, etc. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support. Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

Follow me on Twitter:

NPR: Patients Turn To Online Buddies To Help Healing

61% of adults say they look online for health information. There's a term for them: e-patients.

20% of e-patients go to Internet and social-networking sites where they can talk to medical experts and other patients:

"They are posting their first-person accounts of treatments and side effects from medications. They are part of the conversation. And that, I think, is an indicator of where we could be going in terms of the future of participatory medicine", says Susannah Fox, with the Pew Internet and American Life Project, "The Internet now is not just information. There is a social life of information online."



There are an exponentially increasing number of ways to follow, tag, talk, poke, nudge and communicate in the virtual world. The Conversation Prism by Brian Solis (see the expanded flickr image) shows most social media facets:



This "flower" of Internet communication replaces the old starfish of Web 2.0 shown below:


Social Media Starfish created by Darren Barefoot (Creative Commons license).

References:
Patients Turn To Online Buddies For Help Healing. NPR.

Saturday, December 26, 2009

Presentation: Top 100 Tools for Learning 2009



Top 100 Tools for Learning 2009, compiled from the contributions of 278 learning professionals, by Jane Hart:

"The tools that moved up the list this year. Note although Twitter moved up 10 places this year to become the top tool, in fact there were other tools that moved up even more places, e.g. YouTube has jumped 15 places to come in at 3rd place, Slideshare up 13 places, and Google Apps and Bubbl.us moved up 28 places."

References:
Top 100 Tools for Learning 2009: The Final List. Jane's E-Learning Pick of the Day.

Friday, December 25, 2009

Memorable Quotes from Twitter

Memorable quotes and useful links from my Twitter account:


  • shel israelshelisrael Paula & I made a tray of sandwiches today & gave them to a homeless family shelter. 1st time we did anything like that. Felt good.

  • Robert ScobleScobleizer If you are at home robbing my house you have at least 17 more minutes. Make sure you get the iMac upstairs.

  • Westby Fisher, MDdoctorwes Now that we have the EMR, does a paper cut to the dominant index finger qualify one for short-term disability benefits?

  • Mike TorresMITorres Before having kids you should carry a 25lb sack of potatoes with you everywhere you go. Though that wouldn't simulate the squirm.

  • Loren Feldman1938media How does a @common_squirrel have more followers than me? Last time I checked I'm an actual human being. I love that little squirrel.

  • doc_robdoc_rob Just had a patient call a GI doc "Gastrointelligence." Not always.



  • Tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source, links, etc. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support.

    Thursday, December 24, 2009

    Health News of the Day

    Health News of the Day is a daily summary made from the selected links I post on Twitter. It is in a bullet points format with links to the original sources which include 350 RSS feeds that produce about 2,500 items per day:

    Can Touching Your Toes Test Your Arteries? There is a correlation between inflexible bodies and inflexible arteries. http://bit.ly/5Rcmsn -- PubMed source: Poor trunk flexibility is associated with arterial stiffening. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2009 Oct;297(4):H1314-8. Epub 2009 Aug 7.

    Over the past 20 years, the number of doctors in relation to the American population has risen by 30% http://bit.ly/65bAAf

    "When picking food, go the caveman route. Does this product occur in nature or come from trees? If not, avoid it" - CNN http://bit.ly/8lkbLH

    TIME: The Year in Health 2009 - from A to Z http://bit.ly/5Aju40

    Sleep and school: The owl group had an average GPA of 2.84. Larks and robins averaged 3.18. http://bit.ly/4G4LJl


    Medical news tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source, links, etc. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support. Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

    Follow me on Twitter:

    Social Media Related Tweets and Insights

    From my Twitter account:

    "According to one law firm, over 20% of new divorce petitions contain references to Facebook" http://bit.ly/5u5mz1

    India firms 'count Facebook cost', losing productivity because office staff spend too long on social networking sites http://bit.ly/8rBLPk

    Everyone uses social media today. They just may not know it. http://bit.ly/5vAuI0

    Buzzwords in Academic Papers http://bit.ly/6jd92m

    Don Dodge: Google has made 3 bets on future of computing: Chrome (browser), Apps (cloud), and Android (mobile) that will change everything.
    Your cell phone will become your primary computer according to Google... http://bit.ly/5c56Mw

    Doctor recruiting patients on Twitter? Check this reply timeline: "Hi this is Dr. Johnson.. I treat headache. call at" http://bit.ly/5EmDPj
    -- He is a chiropractor who searches Twitter for symptoms and replies offering his services. It does not look like a good approach to me. Clarification: "Chiropractors are also known as doctors of chiropractic in many U.S. jurisdictions" http://bit.ly/4qxudb - Not an M.D.

    21 things that became obsolete this decade (Business Insider) http://bit.ly/5XEOkZ


    Tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source, links, etc. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support. Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

    Wednesday, December 23, 2009

    Video: Year 2009 As Told In A Google Wave



    Video: Waving Goodbye to 2009.

    References:
    2009 As Told In Google Wave. TechCrunch.

    Related books:

    Health News of the Day

    Health News of the Day is a daily summary made from the selected links I post on Twitter. It is in a bullet points format with links to the original sources which include 350 RSS feeds that produce about 2,500 items per day:

    Carotenoids lutein and zeaxanthin found in green leafy vegetables, colored fruits may prevent age-related eye diseases http://bit.ly/6o7ELw

    Children with cystic fibrosis who do not respond to rhDNase many benefit from a trial of inhaled mannitol. http://bit.ly/7yE6lT

    Childhood obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) is relatively common, occurring in at least 2% of children http://bit.ly/7N2uB8

    At what age does a kid's belief in Santa peak? 5, when young brains are full of imagination and not so much doubt. http://bit.ly/4PCt5G

    Fraud rocks protein community - researcher falsified data about 11 protein structures, wasted drug discovery time http://bit.ly/6KE98H

    PLoS Medicine: Rape with Extreme Violence is The New Pathology in Democratic Republic of Congo http://bit.ly/7wwWP1 - Terrible. Related: World's Most Dangerous Countries for Women - The Big Picture - Boston.com http://goo.gl/BFfZw

    Buzzword: C-reactive protein - from Consumer Reports http://bit.ly/761TcP

    Medical news tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source, links, etc. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support. Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

    Follow me on Twitter:

    Tuesday, December 22, 2009

    Single tweet by hospital employee to Mississippi governor allegedly violates HIPAA, forces her to resign


    WLBT video embedded above.

    From the local WLBT TV station:

    "A tweet to Mississippi Governor Haley Barbour ended with a University Medical Center employee resigning from her job. Last Tuesday Governor Haley Barbour wrote this on his Twitter page, "Glad the Legislature recognizes our dire fiscal situation. Look forward to hearing their ideas on how to trim expenses."
    Less than an hour later Jennifer Carter, a former administrative assistant for UMC's nursing school, tweeted this to Governor Barbour, "Schedule regular medical exams like everyone else instead of paying UMC employees over time to do it when clinics are usually closed."
    Carter was referring to an incident she was told about by several UMC staffers three years ago. She claims the Governor came to the Pavilion on a Saturday when it is usually closed and had it specially staffed with 15-20 people all for a check up.
    Carter doesn't believe her Tweet broke any privacy laws that protect patients. Attorney Terris Harris said just because the Governor is a public figure doesn't mean his health information can be public knowledge."

    References:
    Woman out of a job after sending tweet to Governor Barbour. WLBT, a Raycom Media Station.
    Link via @EdBennett.

    Memorable Quotes from Twitter

    Memorable quotes and useful links from my Twitter account:


    1. Leo Laporteleolaporte 
      Happy Winter Solstice today. Pessimist: it's the longest night of the year. Optimist: today the days start getting longer.from web

    2. Roni Zeigerrzeiger 
      I thanked strangers jogging today, good for the economy: lower health care costs and higher productivity via better mood.from web

    3. Evan Williamsev 
      Is it possible to sunburn your tounge?from txt

    4. Ben Casnochabencasnocha 
      Which is worse: When "I love you" is over-used or under-used in a relationship / within a family?from web

    5. Heidi Allendreamingspires 
      cats are useless guard dogs. I come in the front door and she can't even be bothered to lift her head off the sofa.from TweetDeck

    6. shel israelshelisrael 
      Thing about Twitter is we get to see people at their best and worst; often simultaneously.from web

    7. sandnsurfsandnsurf 
      I don't have OCD...I have friends who need assistance with filling their time...so I dream up inane tasks taking forever to completefrom web

    8. Paulo Coelhopaulocoelho 
      17/12: nothing is completely wrong. Even a broken watch is right twice a dayfrom web


    Tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source, links, etc. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support.