Story Archives of 'medicine'

Here's What's Awesome: Prescription Ice Cream, Rubik's Cube Art

By Brady Carlson on Sunday, November 8, 2009.

Now making its way down the aisle, from Parts Unknown, the undisputed heavyweight champion of awesome links... Here's What's Awesome!

Giant ice cream cone

Now let's forget our troubles with a big bowl of strawberry ice cream

The Robot Will See You Now

By Virginia Prescott on Wednesday, November 4, 2009.

In 1985, the world witnessed the first robot-assisted surgery. The PUMA 560 angled its white plastic arm towards the brain of a patient and carefully inserted a biopsy needle. The procedure was a success and the field of medical robotics was born.

Now researchers are creating robots capable of much more than mechanical tasks. A new crop of social robots cheer on stroke victims struggling through physical therapy, help Alzheimer’s patients remember events from the past, and give Autistic children encouragement as they connect with the outside world.

Some patients actually prefer the mechanical voice of these robots over the prompting of therapists and family members. Programming robots to display more and more human-like characteristics raises the question of whether we are coming dangerously close to singularity -- the point at which machines achieve human-level intelligence.

Dr. Jerome Groopman wrote about the rise of medical robots for The New Yorker, where he’s staff writer. He’s also the author of several books including How Doctors Think.

The New Yorker: Robots That Care

(Photo by Roberto Rizzato via Flickr/Creative Commons)

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Dartmouth Doctors say Drug Labels Leave Out Essential Information

By Elaine Grant on Friday, October 30, 2009.

Two Dartmouth doctors argue that drug labels don’t tell you how well your medications work or how safe they really are.

Worse yet, they don’t tell your doctors everything they need to know.

A little-known piece of legislation based on their work is included in a Senate health care overhaul bill.

And as health reporter Elaine Grant has learned, that could eventually change the way the pharmaceutical industry labels drugs.

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Here's What's Awesome: Iceberg Art, Superintelligent Scalpels

By Brady Carlson on Sunday, October 11, 2009.

It happened to Twitter, it happened to Pets.com, and now it's happened to us. Like so many sites that have grown almost overnight into internet institutions, Here's What's Awesome is facing a backlash - from jealous types, mostly, but we are nothing if not accommodating. So this week, I'll take you behind the scenes at our weekly compendium of awesome links. You'll get to see the template we use to build each week's column. And you'll see that the links we choose here are as awesome as they come. Because when it comes to awesome links, we have nothing to hide.

A Shaman in the ER Ward

By Virginia Prescott on Tuesday, October 6, 2009.

Hospitals in the U.S. evolved following scientific principals and traditions of Western medicine. In our immigrant nation, those practices may conflict with a patient’s belief systems and notions of healing.

In traditional Hmong culture, it is believed that illness occurs when the soul wanders from the body. Shamans, like Kang Thao, help call the soul home.Hospitals in St. Paul, Minn., have served a large population of Hmong people from northern Laos since the 1970s. Over time, hospital administrators have learned to incorporate some Hmong practices into routine treatments by inviting spiritual healers inside patient wards.

This collaboration between Eastern and Western beliefs is part of a growing trend in hospitals to make concessions that can help them keep sick patients in medical care. Hospital administrators have turned off smoke detectors, cleared out surgical rooms, and extended visiting hours to accommodate Hmong healers.

Joining us to talk about this is Kathie Culhane-Pera, the associate medical director for West Side Community Health Services in St. Paul.

The New York Times: A Doctor for Disease, a Shaman for the Soul

(Photo courtesy UC Davis Health System)

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Geriatric For A Fortnight

By Virginia Prescott on Monday, August 31, 2009.

For ten days this summer, Viki Johnson lived in a nursing home. Confined to a wheel chair, she was given sponge baths and had to wait for an aid to place her on the toilet. Unlike the other nursing home residents, Viki is in her twenties and perfectly healthy. She’s a second year medical student participating in the Learning By Living program at the University of New England in Biddeford, Maine.

Each summer, a few medical students are given fake diagnoses and placed in nursing homes to see what it’s like to live as a resident. Viki Johnson joins us to tell us what she learned, along with Dr. Marilyn Gugliucci, Director of Geriatric Education and Research at the University of New England and creator of the program.

New York Times: Experiencing Life, Briefly, Inside a Nursing Home

(Photo by consumerfriendly via Flickr/Creative Commons)

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Drop A Tab And Call In The Morning

By Avishay Artsy on Thursday, August 20, 2009.

While using marijuana to deal with glaucoma or chemotherapy is becoming more recognized as a viable medical response, dropping a tab of acid to cure a headache seems a little extreme. Yet for the first time in four decades, the government is looking into the medical benefits of LSD. Early results are promising, and advocates hope people may someday be able to pick up an LSD pill at their local pharmacy.

The Front Line of Drug Testing

By Virginia Prescott on Tuesday, August 4, 2009.

Twenty million Americans are recruited into clinical trials each year. Some participants have cancer or other life threatening illnesses, but many are perfectly healthy. These healthy volunteers are often the first humans to test the safety of a new drug, years before it hits the market.

They face days and sometimes weeks of blood tests and monitoring, but they are rewarded for their time, in cash. Officially they are only paid for giving up their time for science, but some in the U.S. can make as much as $34,000 a year.

By some estimates, there are as many as 10,000 people in the United States who make their living primarily through phase one clinical trials. There’s a growing debate over whether or not volunteers should be paid. Some argue that paying volunteers puts the poorest members of society unfairly at risk, and could produce misleading data that would allow questionable treatments to enter the market.

Alison Motluck wrote about the "perils of the professional lab rat" in the most recent issue of New Scientist magazine. We're also joined by Brandon, who asked that we not use his last name. He was featured in Alison's article and has been participating in clinical trials since 2005.

New Scientist: Perils of the professional lab rat

(Photo by Ana C. via Flickr/Creative Commons)

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Drug Store Doctors

By Virginia Prescott on Thursday, July 16, 2009.

Retail health care? While Congress wrangles over public options and universal coverage, the private sector is experimenting with new models.

Like this one: your neighborhood drug store. Imagine the shelves of toothpaste and shampoo, the bustling prescription counter...and health care professionals on-site to take your blood pressure, diagnose allergies, and prescribe medications for about 75 bucks. No health insurance required.

A pair of entrepreneurs who set up in-house clinics at Disney World, Toyota plants, and other corporate offices is now setting up shop in Walgreens drug stores. Fast Company Magazine profiled Walgreens' in-house clinic model, which may play a big role in the future of American health care. David Lidsky, senior editor of Fast Company, told us more.

Fast Company Magazine: Why Walgreens is Building Its Own Universal Health-Care System

(Photo by hawaii via Flickr/Creative Commons)

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Buying The Condo, and the Farm

By Deb Baker on Tuesday, July 7, 2009.

Imagine coming home after a long day at work and gazing out at your grazing cattle – because you live in a subdivision built around a farm. Instead of walking to the convenience store, what if you could walk to an organic produce stand? Developers are betting people would like to combine the convenient amenities of suburban design with the benefits of sustainable rural living. As someone who has dreamed of going "back to the land" but doesn’t want to give up walking downtown or having high-speed Internet access, I can see the appeal.