How You Smile:
ARTNATOMY
is Flash illustration of the muscles of the face and neck. Click on “Level 2” to see how we make certain facial expressions. Very cool.
March 27th, 2006
Patient Is “May He Rest In Peace” Coombs Positive:
Robin Coombs, the doc who invented the Coombs test
, died in January. Kind of late to announce it, no? (The
Coombs test
tells you if someone has antibodies against their red blood cells, causing them to be anemic.)
March 27th, 2006
Antibiotics in Infants to Asthma?:
Another reason to dissuade parents from asking for antibiotics for viral infections:
Does Antibiotic Exposure During Infancy Lead to Development of Asthma?
Could this be the reason we’re seeing more and more asthma in pediatrics?
March 25th, 2006
Oglala Sioux Tribe:
Update on the South Dakota abortion ban:
The Oglala Sioux Tribe plans to open a clinic on its reservation
. Touche.
March 23rd, 2006
It’s a Firefox:
Not only my favorite browser,
it’s also cute and cuddly
. (Fake, I know.)
March 23rd, 2006
Kate of Healthy Policy hosts Health Wonk Review #3
at her site; Health Wonk Review is a health policy weekly summary of the best of blogging about health care policy. Great work!
Comments Off
on Starring Health Wonk Review #3
I really wasn’t expecting
Michael
to email me back. But he did. He had some pretty good answers, which I couldn’t find him plagiarizing anywhere from Google, so I sent back some replies to help
him with his paper. Never assume!
1 Comment »
The first expression of religion I’ve seen from an attending happened more than 9 months into my first clinical year:
A very, very sick pre-teen that we made sicker with chemotherapy wasn’t initially improving when he should have been, and the oncologist told us that she
hasn’t slept in days, worrying about the child’s health. After another sleepless night, she told us that she
“Sat down and just prayed. Just prayed that [the child] would be okay, and that his counts would come back. I figured it couldn’t hurt. And then my
daughter came into the room, and asked me what I was doing. And I said, ‘I’m praying for a little sick child who needs to get better,’ and my
daughter decided to pray with me. And then my other daughter walked in, not saying a word, and sat down, bowing her head as well. After about a minute, she
whispered, ‘What are we doing?'”
The attending on staff said that he knows an Indian adult oncologist who can get 1,500 people praying for a patient back in her hometown at a phonecall’s
notice.
Desperate times call for desperate measures, I guess.
Kate
and
Matthew
discuss a
Forbes article
noting that doctors are more religious than the general public, at least according to the survey. I think it’s easy in medicine to lose faith in God or religion
day-to-day; you see terrible tragedies walk into your office or hospital on a regular basis. But I think there’s probably a part of many physicians that at
least
hopes
there’s something more to all of this, something out of our control. It’s not something that we can rely on–but at least something that we can try
to call upon when our medicines simply aren’t enough, or when we could really use the scale to tip in the right direction.
One of the many reasons medicine’s an art, not a science.
5 Comments »