A Medicine That Blunts Opioids Can Help Problem Drinkers, Too … – NPR

If you drink more alcohol than you want to or should, you're not alone. A nationwide survey by the National Institutes of Health found that 28 percent of adults in the U.S. are heavy drinkers or drink more than is recommended.

Yet, most heavy drinkers don't get the help they need.

"The biggest problem we have in the field is that less than 10 percent of individuals with an alcohol use disorder get any treatment whatsoever," says George Koob, director of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism.

Part of the challenge, researchers say, is that many drinkers don't realize that a medicine long used to help people addicted to opioids quit their drug habit can help alcoholics and other heavy drinkers cut back, too.

"I thought my only option was AA," John tells NPR. We've agreed to use only his middle name; disclosing his trouble with alcohol publicly, he says, would jeopardize his business.

He's a 47-year-old professional who says he started out as a social drinker a few beers with his softball team after a game. But he sank into a deep depression after several deaths in his family, and sought "solace in the bottle," he says.

"I wanted to numb my thoughts," says John.

He'd often start with hard liquor in the morning, John says, and it wasn't uncommon to have eight drinks or more before the end of the day.

He worked from home, so he was able to mask the problem for a while. But eventually his wife confronted him.

"She had come home and I was rushing to hide a glass and she was furious with me," he recalls. "Just absolutely furious."

He went to see Paula DeSanto, a therapist and director of Minnesota Alternatives, in Spring Lake Park, Minn. The center provides outpatient mental health and substance use treatment services.

"I would say John's story is not unique," DeSanto tells us. "A lot of people are reluctant."

Sometimes, traditional treatments such as residential rehab or a 12-step program like Alcoholics Anonymous "can [lead to] a significant disruption in their lives," she explains. "There's stigma, shame and embarrassment."

DeSanto suggested a different approach to John. To help work through the loss and grief he was feeling, counseling can help, she told him. She also recommended he try naltrexone, a prescription drug.

"Naltrexone is an effective medication for the treatment of alcohol use disorders," says Koob. He points to a recent meta-analysis published in the journal Addiction that concluded that naltrexone helped reduce heavy drinking and cravings for alcohol.

The analysis included data from 64 clinical trials in which people were given either the medication or a placebo pill to test the effectiveness of the treatment. The analysis also found that another drug, acamprosate, is effective at helping people who have already stopped drinking to maintain abstinence, perhaps partly by easing the physical and emotional cravings experienced by heavy drinkers who quit.

So, how does naltrexone work? The drug seems to curb the euphoric and sedative effects of opiates in the brain. Alcohol is known to activate some of the same receptors in the brain that opioids do, and studies find that by tempering the pleasure from alcohol, naltrexone can help people drink less.

"It blunts the effects of alcohol," says Koob. "People [who use naltrexone] will say they have a drink, and it's not doing much for them."

That was exactly John's experience. After taking the naltrexone pill, he didn't get the buzz he was used to getting, so didn't want to keep drinking. "I actually didn't feel the alcohol's effects," he says. "It was startling."

It's now been about five months since he started taking the medication. He has not stopped drinking completely, but says he has cut way back.

"This is helping me," John says. "I can go out with friends and not worry that I'm going to end up inebriated or sloppy."

According to the findings of a recent review, both naltrexone and acamprosate, are safe, cost-effective and efficacious. But they are substantially underused, according to the review.

Many physicians are "unaware that there are medications to treat alcohol use disorders," says Koob. His institute is stepping up efforts to work with the medical community on that front, he says, and is also touting Rethinking Drinking, a website aimed at consumers that offers the latest research-based information on a range of treatment options.

Any health care provider who is licensed to prescribe medicine can prescribe naltrexone not just mental health professionals or addiction specialists. As as long ago as 1997, a published study showed that treatment of alcohol dependence with naltrexone by primary care doctors can be effective; follow-up research has confirmed that the primary care approach not only works, but makes treatment much more accessible.

According to the NIAAA, "patients can now receive effective alcohol treatment from their primary care doctors or mental health practitioners by combining the newer medications with a series of brief office visits for support."

Naltrexone is certainly not a cure-all, researchers say. And it won't help everyone who has a drinking problem especially if the disorder is severe.

"I use these medications as an adjunct to therapy, and group [sessions] and 12-step meetings" says Dr. Jeffrey Hsu, a psychiatrist at Johns Hopkins University who is certified in addiction medicine. He says that when used alone the medicines are only modestly effective.

But there's good evidence that the combination of counseling and drugs such as naltrexone can help people cut back on drinking, or move toward abstinence.

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A Medicine That Blunts Opioids Can Help Problem Drinkers, Too ... - NPR

There Is No Such Thing as Alternative Medicine – Big Think

If you want to sell an idea an opponent is helpful, especially if what youre selling cannot stand on its own merit. For example, homeopathy creator Samuel Hahnemann had trouble proving his provings offered anything beyond a placebo response. Given his reservations against the medical industrymany complaints were crediblehe dubbed any treatment offered by the conventional system allopathic.

Unfortunately for Hahnemann his philosophythe less of an active ingredient remains the more powerful a remedy is (once you reach 13c on the homeopathic scale there is no longer any active ingredient left)is nonsense. While today homeopaths still use allopathic as a derogatory sleight against mainstream medicine, theyre only shadowboxing an invisible enemy.

Alternative medicine, which includes homeopathy as well as vitamin and supplement companies and a number of other therapeutic modalities, is a $34 billion a year industry. While these companies enjoy the fruits of loose, and in many cases non-existent, regulations, their argument against allopaths is not the cry of the oppressed, but the desperate pleas of businesses concerned with their bottom lines.

Medicine is medicine. As pediatrician Paul Offit writes,

Theres no such thing as conventional or alternative or complementary or integrative or holistic medicine. Theres only medicine that works and medicine that does not.

This does not stop the irrational stream of unproven (or disproven) therapies arising from the holistic and wellness sphere. While pharmaceuticals and the companies producing them have their own problems, the rigorous standards of multiple trials, years of development and research, and millions of dollars spent are absent in the vitamin aisle of Whole Foods.

Yet many pharmaceuticals are based on similar or even the same botanical substances. At a public hearing on homeopathic product regulation on April 20, 2015, Adriane Fugh-Berman, an associate professor in Georgetowns Department of Pharmacology and Physiology, points out that homeopathic remedies can contain snake venom, heavy metals, controlled substances, [and] glandular extracts that would be considered dangerous if subject to federal regulation.

She points out that Guna Interleukin 12 is labeled for usage as a pain reliever and anti-inflammatory agent for autoimmune disorders. The remedy contains ingredients usually placed under intense scrutiny when used by pharmaceutical companies, but since the producer, Guna Interleukin Remedies, sidesteps regulation by utilizing the homeopathic loophole, consumers are ingesting potentially dangerous dosages.

When I asked the FDA why this oversight exists, press officer Lyndsay Meyer referred me to her agencys regulations, which refer to the unique nature of these drug products. Thanks to an amendment in 1983, homeopathic drugs are exempt from the requirement for laboratory determination of identity and strength of each active ingredient prior to release for distribution.

Hahnemann believed the less of a substance in the remedy, the stronger it is. Thus a partially diluted proving is not that strong while one containing no active ingredients is very powerful. Problem is, active ingredients matter. A recent report notes that one homeopathic teething pill resulted in more than 370 adverse reactions in children over a ten-year period.

This supposedly weak remedy is labeled 6X, meaning some of the active ingredients remains. One ingredient, Belladonna, is diluted at 12X (still active in mixture), which has a series of side effects, including GI infections and blockage, increased high blood pressure, and increased fever.

As Offit reports, 50 percent of Americans use alternative medicines while 10 percent give it to their children. While the FTC stepped in last year to plug a regulatory hole in homeopathic labeling, the legalese used by vitamin and supplement makers is confusing to consumers who read the large type on bottles and think their flu symptoms will be alleviated or, worse, that chelation cures cancer.

As health and wellness are wrapped into the fitness industry the science is only getting more confused. Just yesterday I walked by a center in Santa Monica that offers aerial silk and yoga classes, massage therapy, and IV vitamin drips. For $175 an hour you can have high doses of vitamin C, zinc, and lysine pumped into your bloodstream after Pilates, even though elevated levels of all three of those substances can cause numerous gastro-intestinal problems. Distrust in one doctor should not imply blind faith in another.

While supplements, vitamins, and superfoods are touted as cancer-fighting, antioxidant-boosting wonder drugs, the science is less enthusiastic. Offit writes,

Studies have now shown that people who take large quantities of vitamins and dietary supplements with antioxidant activity are more likely to have cancer and heart disease and die sooner.

Hahnemann helped inspire a holism movement championing Hippocratic philosophy during an important transition in medical history. The emergence of biochemistry, neuroscience, germ theory, disease specification, and molecular genetics made the invisible world visible. Widespread usage of antibiotics and vaccines offered humans an evolutionary thrust forward in biological knowledge. Suddenly a hostile planet became that much less daunting.

Yet a growing suspicion of corporate and political interests in the sixties inspired a new wave of holism thats gaining strength a half-century later. Were right to be wary of corporate agendas and political mismanagement when it comes to healthcare. Still, this does not excuse an entire industry pimping products with little to no scientific backing thats taking advantage of regulatory loopholes.

The reality is the most basic advicemove often and diversely; eat a balanced, whole foods dietis boring in an age of immediate gratification. People would rather sprint with a wonder-pill than put their head down for a marathon, and too many charlatans are stepping in to pretend theyve developed that pill.

As Offit concludes, theres a problem when we celebrate Suzanne Somersa saleswoman and industry unto herselfwhile only occasionally acknowledging the groundbreaking work of Siddhartha Mukherjee, a biological scientist, physician, and Pulitzer Prize-winning author. There are many incredible men and woman devoted to finding medicine that works. The alternative is suffering, something many companies and hucksters willfully champion at a time when we can all use less of it.

--

Derek's next book,Whole Motion: Training Your Brain and Body For Optimal Health, will be published on 7/4/17 by Carrel/Skyhorse Publishing. He is based in Los Angeles. Stay in touch onFacebookandTwitter.

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There Is No Such Thing as Alternative Medicine - Big Think

Reminder: Barry Jenkins’s First Movie Is Currently Streaming on Netflix – Vulture

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Reminder: Barry Jenkins's First Movie Is Currently Streaming on Netflix - Vulture

‘There is no other medicine’: Texas father breaks law to treat self-harming autistic daughter with marijuana – Washington Post

Mark Zartler says cannabis is the only thing that has helped his daughter, who has cerebral palsy and severe autism that causes her to self-harm. (Gillian Brockell/The Washington Post)

Kara Zartlers life began too soon.

Along with her twin sister, she was born 26 weeks early. At1 pound 12 ounces, she weighed slightly less than the healthy Keeley. Then, 10hours into life, Kara suffered a brain hemorrhage. Seventeen years later, shes lucky to be alive. But she has cerebral palsy and severe autism, which in her case causes compulsive self-injurious behavior that began with she was four years old.

Its a terrible sight to see, her father Mark Zartler told The Washington Post via telephone from his home in Richardson, Tex. She hits herself in the face repeatedly. She gets into a loop, and she cant really stop. Sometimes she can self-recover, but other times it just extends and extends and extends.

After years of trying different drugs with little luck, Zartler eventually gave Kara marijuana on the advice of a friend, even though its illegal in his home state of Texas. To his surprise, it worked. Now, years later, hes chosen to go public with his story though he risks potentially unwanted attention in hopes of changing his states laws. Currently, Senate Bill 269 is in committee. If the bill becomes law, as Mark hopes it will, Texas will be the 29th state to legalize medical marijuana, which could change Karas life.

When they began, Karas fits, which include hitting, scratching and biting herself, would last for 12 hours. Zartler, a 48-year-old software engineer, and his wife Christy, apediatric nurse practitioner,would take half-hour shifts physically restraining her, sometimes for an entire day.

I like to just get her into a bear hug,keep her arms down. Shell pinch and rip the skin on my hands, but it just doesnt hurt anymore, he said.

Her school used a modified straitjacket, but shed worm her way out of it.

She could inflict severe damage, once breaking her nose. Shes had cauliflower ears since she wassix like MMA fighters, Zartler said. She comes home from school with bleeding ears. Once, she even bit through her mothers finger, sending her to the hospital.

The family cycled through four neurologists, desperately seeking a solution. Kara was placed onRisperidone, an antipsychotic drug generally used to treat schizophrenia and bi-polar disorder. It was somewhat effective. Slowly Kara had what her parents called good hours in which she wouldnt self-harm, then good days. But it didnt stop the fits, and the medication left Kara slower, foggier. She stopped making eye contact, couldnt use the restroom on her own.

When she was about 11, a neighbor approached Zartler with an idea: Cannabis.

The drug isnt legal in Texas, not even in medicinal form save for one small caveat some people with intractable epilepsy might be eligible for low-THC cannabis, according to the Marijuana Policy Project. In all other instances, possession of the drug carries a hefty sentence, often years in prison.

But Zartler felt he was out of options.

Kara likes the beach, but its hard to get there. In the car, at that time, she would last two to three hours before going into these episodes, Zartler said. The problem with the car is you cant restrain her, and she fights back.

Before one such trip, he fed Kara part of a marijuana brownie his neighbor baked.

She made it the whole way, Zartler said. It was a tremendous success.

He was new to the drug but learned how to extract the THC into oil and bake such brownies. Slowly over several years, we introduced it to her life, he said. Eventually he began using a vaporizer, which like its namesake vaporizes the THC for quick consumption.

Now, Kara is 17. He weaned her off the high doses ofRisperidone, and noticed Kara making huge developmental strides. She began making eye contact again and can use the bathroom on her own.

Were not doing this instead of other options. Kara has had teams of doctors, and its always been this way. But theres no other medicine that relieves her fits once they start, Zartler said. There were lingering doubts for years, but I dont doubt what were doing any more.

Zartler and Christy use the medicine less than in the past, but during high-stress situations, hell still administer it. The day before speaking with The Post, in fact, Kara had a fit. Mark held her in his strong bear hug for an hour, but finally enough was a enough and he gave her a treatment.

And she had a great day, he said. And shes not a zombie. She doesnt just lay there. She just becomes normal Kara.

When their experiment began, Zartler said, We thought we were the only people in the world who were crazy enough to do this. We just werent connected with any groups I had no earthly idea anyone on earth was doing this.

But parents across the United States have been attempting to treat autism with marijuana for some time. Though research has found the drug useful in treating epilepsy, only anecdotal links have found it helpful for those with severe autism.

Writer and Fulbright scholarMarie Myung-Ok Lee, for example,wrote in The Post that cannabiscookies calmed her autistic son, who would become consumed by violent rages and bang his head, scream for hours and literally eat his shirts.

[I made my son cannabis cookies. They changed his life.]

Lee and Zartler are far from the only ones to discover such relief. But they, like many others, face potential criminal charges for administering it. Zartler cant move his aging parents and in-laws live nearby and require the Zartlers assistance. But while hes in Texas, hes in jeopardy.

This is medicine, so we travel with it. If Im driving through Texas, and I get pulled over, Zartler said, his Texan drawl trailing off before continuing. Im going to be arrested.

Added Zartler, At some point in her life, its going to be a problem.

Kara will be in high school until shes 22. At that point, she might have to go to a group home, which would help socialize her. Zartler worries about getting injured and not being able to care for her. If nothing else, Karas likely to outlive us.

Its one thing for us to break the law, but how much can we ask of her caregivers? Zartler said. I cant ask a third-party caregiver to commit felony.

No laws are ever going to change in Texas unless we can say this works, he said, so hes sharing Karas story with the world.

He knows therisks. It wouldnt surprise me if the sheriff knocks on the door of if Child Protective Services knocks on the door tomorrow. But he feels that theyre worth it.

Obviously Im doing an antagonistic thing, but I dont want to be antagonistic about it, he said. Were hoping with the attention were getting, we can influence people into doing the right thing.

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'There is no other medicine': Texas father breaks law to treat self-harming autistic daughter with marijuana - Washington Post

Promoting Appropriate Use of Cardiac Imaging: No Longer an Academic Exercise – Annals of Internal Medicine

From Cook County Health and Hospitals System, Chicago, Illinois; Sidney Kimmel Medical College at Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma; University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville, Florida; University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan; New York University Langone Medical Center, New York, New York; American Society of Nuclear Cardiology, Bethesda, Maryland; University of Rochester Medical Center, Rochester, New York; Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island; and Cleveland Clinic Florida, Weston, Florida.

Disclosures: Disclosures can be viewed at http://www.acponline.org/authors/icmje/ConflictOfInterestForms.do?msNum=M16-2673.

Requests for Single Reprints: Rami Doukky, MD, MSc, Division of Cardiology, John H. Stroger Jr. Hospital of Cook County, 1901 West Harrison Street, Suite 3620, Chicago, IL 60612; e-mail, rdoukky@cookcountyhhs.org.

Current Author Addresses: Dr. Doukky: Division of Cardiology, John H. Stroger Jr. Hospital of Cook County, 1901 West Harrison Street, Suite 3620, Chicago, IL 60612.

Dr. Diemer: Sidney Kimmel Medical College of Thomas Jefferson University, 1025 Walnut Street, 100 College Building, Philadelphia, PA 19107.

Dr. Medina: University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, OU Physicians Building, Internal Medicine, Suite 4E, 825 NE 10th Street, Oklahoma City, OK 73104.

Dr. Winchester: University of Florida College of Medicine, 1600 SW Archer Road, Box 100277, Gainesville, FL 32610.

Dr. Murthy: University of Michigan, 1338 Cardiovascular Center, 1500 East Medical Center Drive, SPC 5873, Ann Arbor, MI 48109.

Dr. Phillips: New York University Langone Medical Center, 530 First Avenue, New York, NY 10016.

Ms. Flood, Dr. Giering, and Ms. Hearn: American Society of Nuclear Cardiology, 4340 East-West Highway, Suite 1120, Bethesda, MD 20814.

Dr. Schwartz: University of Rochester Medical Center, 601 Elmwood Avenue, Box 679-N, Rochester, NY 14642.

Dr. Russell: Rhode Island Hospital Cardiovascular Institute, 593 Eddy Street, Floor 5, Providence, RI 02903.

Dr. Wolinsky: Cleveland Clinic Florida, 2950 Cleveland Clinic Boulevard, Weston, FL 33331.

Author Contributions: Conception and design: R. Doukky, G. Diemer, A. Medina, D.E. Winchester, V.L. Murthy, R.G. Schwartz, D. Wolinsky.

Analysis and interpretation of the data: R. Doukky, A. Medina.

Drafting of the article: R. Doukky, G. Diemer, D. Winchester, V.L. Murthy, L.M. Phillips, R.G. Schwartz, R. Russell.

Critical revision of the article for important intellectual content: R. Doukky, A. Medina, D. Winchester, V.L. Murthy, L.M. Phillips, K. Flood, L. Giering, G. Hearn, R.G. Schwartz, D. Wolinsky.

Final approval of the article: R. Doukky, G. Diemer, A. Medina, D. Winchester, V.L. Murthy, L.M. Phillips, K. Flood, L. Giering, R.G. Schwartz, R. Russell, D. Wolinsky.

Administrative, technical, or logistic support: L. Giering.

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Promoting Appropriate Use of Cardiac Imaging: No Longer an Academic Exercise - Annals of Internal Medicine

Get the dope on dagga medicine – Times LIVE

But that idea has gone up in smoke, with medical experts saying it will still be illegal for recreational use.

"Cannabis is not being legalised, it's being rescheduled from a schedule 7 drug to a schedule 6 medicine," said SA Medical Association spokesman Mzukisi Grootboom.

"Unfortunately, the general response has been that it is a drug that is going to be freely available and accessed for social use - but it's not going to be like that. You won't be able to just walk into a coffee shop and order it."

Earlier this month the Medicines Control Council said it would publish draft guidelines that would be open for public comment soon. The guidelines will include details on standardisation, the manufacturing of the medicine and where it will be available.

The IFP has been a pioneer of the move, following the introduction of the Medical Innovation Bill in 2014 by former IFP MP Mario Oriani-Ambrosini, who faced a battle with terminal cancer before his death later that year.

IFP chief whip Narend Singh said that, although there were a number of people in favour of and opposing the proposed legislation, he had encountered more who were for it.

Grootboom said the rescheduling was welcomed by Sama as it allowed access to the medicine for more research.

"When the issue was brought to parliament, we had a look at what was happening internationally in Europe and the US and there are claims that it's useful for certain interventions. There is evidence that it helps with chronic pain, nausea and vomiting."

The first roll-out of the medicine is unlikely to take place in April as planned .

"First, the guideline document on growing cannabis for medicinal use will have to be published for public comment," said the MCC's Griffith Molewa. The comments will be considered and worked into the guideline document. The MCC will publish it to be implemented."

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Get the dope on dagga medicine - Times LIVE

Homeless Find a Champion in Canada’s Medicine Hat – The New … – New York Times


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Homeless Find a Champion in Canada's Medicine Hat - The New ...
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Medicine in the 4th Industrial Revolution: the third entity of the new doctor-patient relationship – The European Sting

(IFMSA, 2017)

This article was exclusively written for theStingbyMr ErickDupont.The writeris and a 3rd year medical student from UFPEL, a federal university from southern Brazil. He is alsoaffiliated tothe International Federation of Medical Students Associations (IFMSA). However, the opinions expressed in this piece belongstrictly to the writer and do not necessarily reflect IFMSAs view on the topic, nor The European Stings one.

Since its beginning with Hippocrates in Greece, despite its evolutions and breakthroughs, the practice of medicine has always consisted in the relation between both patient and physician.

This once told basis of healthcare is being rewritten by a process called the 4th industry revolution, a term crafted in Germany in 2013 to describe a group of scientific innovations in the field of technology that are already revolutionizing our known world (1). Fortunately, or not, the area of medicine is not being spared.

Differently from the previous industry revolutions, where the man dominated the physical forces of nature, the 4th revolution takes place on the digital field. Among other characteristics, the artificial intelligence is one of the most impressive promises of the revolution. Thats justified by the immensely bigger capability of computer to process data when compared to humans.

Some even dare to say that the future of medicine remains on data processing, and not on the development of new surgeries or medications (2). With this tool at hand, the famous Dr. Google could become a reality, bringing diagnosis to a simple touch of a button. However, this new horizon is not bright for everyone.

Most must think that if a computer is able to process tons of data per second, access the latest information available and dont have the memory bias that human doctors have, the days of sitting in a M.D. waiting room are counted. But thats not quite right, remaining hope for those who still want to heal people.

All this future seems so promising, but for it become true, theres a big path yet to be trod. Devices that can remotely monitor and create continuous reports of blood pressure and sugar levels are already among us, but even with the cheapening of the technology, is not yet feasible to substitute the human labor for technological devices.

Besides all the changes that this revolution may bring to the medical market, is beyond discussion that its breakthroughs will benefit the way we deal with health. The possibilities are limitless: mapping every patients DNA in order to develop specific medications and also discover genetic diseases; 3D printing personalized prosthesis and even use the Internet of Things to receive constant, instead of transversal, data from patients devices are just some of them (3).

The key to a smooth transition into a reality where these gadgets take place is not to compete with them, but to see them as useful and indispensable tools.

As this is an already in motion process, neither health professionals nor students can stay idle. Adaptation is going to be needed, and learn how to use and when to use the new options are duties for all the ones in the health field.

Knowing the basics of informatics is the minimum that can be done in this technology revolution, and if all that is promised become real, new tools wont only be a differential for those physicians that seek them, but will need to be included on a remodeled grade of the medicine course.

References

About the author

Erick Dupont is a 19 years old man and a 3rd year medical student from UFPEL, a federal university from southern Brazil. He has already been involved in volunteering projects of International Federation of Medical Students Associations (IFMSA) and now is local exchange officer from IFMSAs Exchange Program. Currently awaiting his first IFMSAs exchange, to take place in Germany in February 2017.

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Medicine in the 4th Industrial Revolution: the third entity of the new doctor-patient relationship - The European Sting

Dr. David Katz: Preventive Medicine: The fasting and the furious – New Haven Register

I have yet to see any installments of the long-running Fast and Furious movie franchise, although my son and I recently agreed we probably should. There is, however, a much longer franchise that Ive been watching closely throughout my career: the fad and folly franchise, devoted not to fast cars, but fast weight loss and promises of high-octane health, achieved magically and without effort.

There is a new one on the marquee at the moment. I put new in quotes for two good reasons. First, we have known there is no truly new thing under the sun since Ecclesiastes. Second, that is more true of weight loss than anything else. Standard operating procedure in the weight loss space is to wait out the 20-minute attention span of our culture, and then re-peddle repackaged leftovers as new.

Given that, the new item here is fasting. Fasting, of course, is the furthest thing from new. When actual scholars write about the Paleo diet, the intermittent cycles of feast and famine that figure in the catch-as-catch-can diets of hunter/foragers get prominent mention. Intermittent fasting has almost certainly, almost always been part of the human dietary experience for want of choice.

Eventually, of course, it did evolve into choices such as those made by most major religions to impose times of fasting. Whether this was about public health, crowd control, spiritual concentration, or strategic rationing, I defer to historians, sociologists, and theologians. We may simply acknowledge that among the many non-new things under the sun, fasting is notable.

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But there is a new study about it, and that has engendered a constellation of media attention, in which my own recent interviews have figured. The study assigned a group of overweight people to either their usual diet, or fasting five days per month for three months. Those who fasted lost weight.

What is being touted as new is improvement in an array of metabolic markers, spanning lipids, glucose, and measures of inflammation, in the fasting group. The study authors suggest this is a benefit of fasting, and the media have seemed fairly inclined to eat it up. If you are sensing I dont buy it, you are correct.

Short-term weight loss among those with an excess of body fat improves metabolic markers temporarily at least no matter how its achieved. Cholera works. So does cocaine. That does not make either of these a good idea.

Playing to the popular palate, coverage of the fasting trial implies something uniquely, even magically beneficial about fasting. But as I see it, all weve got is this: eating some of the time leads to weight loss relative to eating all of the time. Weight loss, in turn, produces short-term improvement in all of the biomarkers that weight loss always improves, whatever good or bad, sustainable or fleeting thing is causing the weight loss. Fasting has not been shown to have anything that cabbage soup, or grapefruit didnt have before.

Is intermittent fasting a good idea? I think I can be. If the fasting is suitably intermittent, sustained over time, and combined with sensible eating the rest of the time it can be beneficial. That said, if it does temporarily and then stopped; or associated with eating poorly on bingeing on the other days I think it can just as readily be harmful. Its certainly no panacea.

Of course, when fasting is being peddled to us, we are unlikely to get any such provisos. The Fast Diet, for instance, makes all the customary promises. The assertions that invariably accompany diet claims always make me think of Bertrand Russell: The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, and wiser people so full of doubts. I think Bert should included swindlers on his list, but otherwise pretty much nailed it.

Until or unless my son and I indulge in that movie marathon weve discussed, I wont really know where those guys are going fast, or why they are furious. I do know, however, that public health nutrition has been going nowhere fast for decades, spinning our wheels instead in the repetition of folly. I do know that we should all be furious about a culture propagating obesity and chronic disease for profit with willfully addictive junk food.

And alas, I also know that misplaced hope will likely triumph over experience yet again, and the public will line up to buy tickets to the latest installment of fast-weight-loss-meets-false promises, never noticing that fools, fanatics or swindlers are in the drivers seat just about every time.

Dr. David L. Katz;www.davidkatzmd.com; founder, True Health Initiative

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Dr. David Katz: Preventive Medicine: The fasting and the furious - New Haven Register

Donkeys hides smuggled from SA to China for medicine – News24

Cape Town - A Johannesburg businessman was arrested last week after falsely declaring a shipment of 300 donkey hides at OR Tambo airport. Investigators suspect that the man, a Chinese national, is the leader of a local donkey smuggling ring.

Gelatin from donkey hides is used to manufacture a traditional Chinese medicine called ejiao. Prescribed for treating anaemia, sleeplessness and excessive menstrual bleeding, among other ailments, ejiao sells for up to R5 000 per kg. (Though clinical evidence for these treatments is lacking, a small peer-reviewed study suggests ejiao may be effective for treating anaemia.)

Surging demand and a shortage of donkeys in China have led, in the last few years, to the unprecedented emergence of a global donkey market, with reports of large-scale trade across Africa. According to Grace de Lange from the National Council of SPCAs (NSPCA) Farm Animal Protection Unit, donkey prices in South Africa have increased more than fourfold in the last two years.

The trade, though not technically illegal, is poorly regulated, and has drawn condemnation from welfare groups following reports of donkeys being slaughtered inhumanely. Donkeys are the latest victims of the trade in animal parts for medicinal purposes to the Far East, wrote the NSPCA in a statement last September, when news of the trade first broke.

South Africas Animal Protection Act forbids cruelty towards animals. According to Mpho Mokoena, an inspector in the NSPCAs Farm Animal Protection Unit, large numbers of donkeys have been slaughtered using knives and hammers in rural parts of Limpopo, the Northern Cape, and North West Province.

Its extremely upsetting to see the remains, Mokoena said.

In an incident last October SPCA officials intercepted a flatbed truck carrying 41 crushed, dead or dying donkeys in Limpopo. Four foreign African men were sentenced to eight months in jail.

The confiscation at O.R. Tambo took place on February 15 after customs officials noticed a foul smell emanating from 39 boxes labelled cladding. The boxes were destined for Hong Kong.

Four days later police raided a farm in Randfontein, confiscating more than 1 000 skins. The premises had been rented by the same man whose fraudulent shipment was blocked. (Police have not yet released the mans name, which is known to GroundUp, and did not respond to questions in time for publication.)

Government is starting to take the illegal skins issue seriously, said Ashley Ness from the Highveld Horse Care Unit (HHCU), a welfare nonprofit that has been monitoring the trade. Hopefully this will lead to more arrests.

Spike in donkey hide demand

Separately, the North West Department of Rural, Environmental and Agricultural Development (READ) announced on Tuesday that it was embarking on a formal donkey production program, investing in farms and equine abattoirs for meeting Chinese demand. Provincial representatives signed a memorandum of understanding with China last year.

The spike in donkey hide demand around the world means that donkeys and donkey products are an agricultural commodity and will contribute to [growth] in the province, the department wrote in a statement. The Department strongly condemns illegal trade of [donkey] hides and meat.

But Ness, from the HHCU, feared that these initiatives would lead to further animal abuse. Whos going to monitor the facilities? Theres a risk that this will cause more welfare issues.

The HCCU launched a petition the same day calling for an end to all donkey slaughter in South Africa. By Friday afternoon it had drawn nearly 500 signatures.

Gumtree South Africa announced on Friday that is was prohibiting all sales of donkeys and donkey skins on its platform. We decided that extreme measures would be necessary to prevent further unsavoury practises, spokesperson Claire Cobbledick said.

24.com encourages commentary submitted via MyNews24. Contributions of 200 words or more will be considered for publication.

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Donkeys hides smuggled from SA to China for medicine - News24

Doctors urged to avoid ‘over-treating’ – BBC News


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Doctors urged to avoid 'over-treating'
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And she names her plan "realistic medicine" in her new annual report. Dr Calderwood said she came up with the concept in response to research that found that doctors would make different choices for themselves and their families than they do for their ...

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Pill-sized device could revolutionise medicine by sending health … – The Sun

Patients swallow tiny device which is powered by acid found in the stomach and sends information about temperature and heart rate to your mobile phone

A SENSOR the size of a pill that collects health data from inside your body could revolutionise medicine.

The silver bullet sees patients swallow the small sensor before it starts sending information such as temperature and heart rate to the persons mobile phone.

Diemut Strebe

The tiny piece of technology is powered by acid found inside the stomach and the monitoring of these vital signs could significantly improve medical care.

The sensor was unveiled at the worlds biggest science fair in Boston, USA, where Dr Phillip Nadeau, from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said: The self-powered pill would monitor your vital signs from inside for weeks.

It sits there making measurements and transmitting them to your phone. The information could be used to help doctors decide what medicine and treatment is best to give their patients.

MIT

The innovation was inspired by a lemon battery which uses citric acid from the fruit to charge up with energy.

MIT, who have been working with the Brigham and Womens Hospital on the project, said the pill can generate enough energy to power a thermometer that sends data wirelessly to a receiver two metres away.

A version of the pill, that powers up when a zinc electrode interacts with stomach acid, was tested on pigs.

The 30mm-long device took six days to travel through the animals digestive system with scientists now aiming to create a smaller version of it for human use.

The star-shaped arms on the pill are designed to help it stay in the stomach but without blocking food that is being digested.

They also hope the device can be used to release medicine by having the arms gradually dissolve = before the device passes out of the body.

Giovanni Traverso, from Brigham and Womens Hospital, said: Taking a capsule once a month could change how we think about delivering medication.

We pay for your stories! Do you have a story for The Sun Online news team? Email us at tips@the-sun.co.uk or call 0207 782 4368.

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Pill-sized device could revolutionise medicine by sending health ... - The Sun

Lisa Nicole Cloud Shuts Down Her Haters at the Married to Medicine Reunion: 5 Emotional Moments You Need to … – Bravo (blog)

Pour one out for this season of Married to Medicine. As Season 4 came to a close, things got particularly emotional for Lisa Nicole Cloud and her hubby, Darren, as she continued to defend her desire to want more kids. And as she held back tears, it seemed like some fences were mended as Toya Bush-Harris stepped up and extended an olive branch to her pal. We're breaking down some of the buzziest moments from last night inThe Daily DishMorning After.

Lisa Nicole had a big message for her hubby as the season wrapped up: "And what I'm gonna say to you is is you got to stop saying dumb s*** that embarrasses me." Preach, sister.

We didn't know you could read someone based on their teeth and have it get this feisty, but, then again, you learn something new everyday.

Did Tom Schwartz end up going in drag for the Vanderpump Rules Season 5 reunion? Who ended up making a cameo? Only time will tell.

Eileen Davidson and Vince Van Patten are giving us all sorts of relationship goals with their rollerblading dates. "I make my husband carry everything in his backpack. 'Take my phone, take my mirror, take my lipstick.' So I don't have to carry them," the RHOBHwifeexplained about their outings.

We now know what keeps the spark going for Erika Girardi and her husband Joe: "You have to be friends. You have to be friends and you have to have a common ground. You have to like the same things. You have to see the world the same way. You have to have the same interests. And when you are genuinely rooting for the other guy you know Tom is very supportive of me and I am very supportive of him and I think that's what makes it work."

Check back every morning as we'll be recapping the 5 must-see moments from the night before. And don't forget to tune in toThe Daily Dishpodcastto get the latest on what's happening in the Bravo galaxy, currently available oniTunes,Soundcloud,Google Play, and Amazon's Alexa.

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Lisa Nicole Cloud Shuts Down Her Haters at the Married to Medicine Reunion: 5 Emotional Moments You Need to ... - Bravo (blog)

The yin and yang of traditional Chinese medicine – EUobserver

Malta, the current holder of the EU council presidency, has signed an agreement with China that would increase the provision of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) to its citizens.

On 17 January, Maltas health minister Chris Fearne and his Chinese counterpart Li Bin signed an agreement in Valletta to increase cooperation. This agreement will see the opening of a new TCM clinic at St Lukes Hospital in Pieta, Malta, and further cooperation between China and Malta to promote medical tourism and conduct joint research.

Minister Fearne noted that 10,000 patients made use of government clinics providing TCM services in 2016. The Maltese government clearly sees the value of using TCM in healthcare practices.

But many in the healthcare community do not share the same enthusiasm. In the treatment of specific diseases and disorders, critics assert that the available data does not support claims made by the TCM community.

Widely practiced in China for over 2500 years, TCM uses herbal medicines and various mind and body practices, such as acupuncture, massage (tui na), and exercise (qigong), to treat or prevent health problems.

In the West, TCM is largely seen as complementary or alternative medicine.

Practitioners of conventional medicine assessing the value of TCM have, on the whole, been highly sceptical.

Effectiveness in conventional medicine is usually tested with double-blind randomised trials of a specific medicine on a specific disease, and compared to existing approved medicines.

Very few TCM studies meet the accepted standards, often due to flawed research designs. Much of the data on TCMs is done in China, and not usually included in systematic reviews in Western literature.

In the case of physical therapies such as medical qigong - a form of exercise that incorporates movement, breathing and meditation that TCM practitioners claim is effective in treating fibromyalgia and arthritis, as well as improving respiratory and cardiovascular functions - it is notoriously difficult to implement a placebo, which is crucial in assessing effectiveness in trials.

The practice, however, continues to grow across Europe, with Belgiums Saint-Pierre Hospital being one of the latest to add qigong classes for patients.

The nature of TCM dictates that there can be a lack of consensus among practitioners on diagnosing a patients condition and on what treatments to use. The Chinese government and TCM practitioner organisations have sought to standardise aspects of the training curriculum and qualifications to respond to this challenge.

But Western medical consensus is that global health would improve further with a greater uptake of conventional medicine in Asia, rather than TCM being more widely used outside.

On the other hand, there is more of an open mind about research into the thousands of chemical compounds estimated to be found in TCM - a potential pharmacological goldmine.

The EU research framework programme has provided funding in this field. A programme called TCMCANCER, for instance, aims to identify compounds from herbal traditional Chinese medicine for cancer treatments.

A number of TCMs are derived from animals and some practices are considered unacceptable in Europe for animal welfare and environmental reasons.

Shark fin used in soup, for example, has traditionally been considered both a delicacy and a means to improve health and vitality. Tens of millions of sharks are killed each year for their fins. Until recently, the EU was the biggest supplier until a ban on shark finning was strengthened to protect various threatened European shark species.

A steady growth in the use of TCMs has been seen in the EU, North America and Australasia in recent decades, especially with a view to maintaining health and well-being in later life.

A number of doctors are strong advocates for TCM and some countries, such as Malta and Belgium, even reimburse treatments.

The EU is responsible for setting the laws for the EU single market in herbal medicinal products, and the assessment of specific products is undertaken by the European Medicines Agency and national regulators.

Products are approved for quality and safety which is important, given that a number of regulators have expressed concerns on standards in the supply of traditional herbal medicines. But regulation of herbal products and its practitioners has also been handled sensitively, in view of cultural beliefs of some European citizens and migrants.

TCM is predominantly seen as complementary medicine. Patients are encouraged not to forego the conventional approach and use herbal or complementary approaches as an additional option, if they wish. Ultimately, this interaction comes down to the individual doctor and patient relationship.

The European Medicines Agency has a list of diseases that require a more thorough, centralised assessment if there are claims that herbal medicine can treat it. This assessment procedure is more in line with conventional medicine. Not surprisingly, this list only contains some of the most serious and potentially fatal diseases, such as cancer, diabetes and dementia.

Healthcare policy for governments is increasingly about patient satisfaction and encouraging engagement in our own health as a form of prevention.

Non-compulsory exposure for both patients and doctors to TCM for wellness, and as complementary medicine, fits with such a strategy.

TCM claims of treating specific diseases require more data, with a more rigorous methodology to penetrate the world of conventional medicine in the EU.

The agreement between Malta and China demonstrates an open-minded approach to the delivery of healthcare, addressing the major criticism of TCM by providing research data to back up its claims.

For a relatively small investment, the Maltese government can build on its positive experiences with TCM in recent years. As such, Malta is to be commended, so long as its use is complementary to conventional medicine and optional on the part of the patient.

However, TCMs should be held to the same standards as conventional treatments - where anecdotal support is insufficient and credible data is demanded.

Steve Bridges is an independent health policy adviser in Brussels. His Health Matters column takes a closer look at health-related policies, issues and trends in the EU.

Original post:

The yin and yang of traditional Chinese medicine - EUobserver

SD’s top family medicine physician hopes for improved rural access to health care – WDAZ

Marlys Luebke, a 28-year veteran of the Douglas County Memorial Hospital, was named 2017 Family Doctor of the Year earlier this month. She is the first woman to be awarded the "highest honor for practicing physicians," Luebke said Friday. Luebke is also a 1977 graduate of Parkston High School.

No stranger to the challenges of practicing rural medicine, Luebke believes patient access to speciality doctors in the towns she serves Corsica, Armour and Stickney could improve with the help of expanded telemedicine.

Telemedicine allows health care professionals to evaluate, diagnose and treat patients in remote locations using telecommunications technology such as video.

Luebke utilizes telemedicine at times for and with her patients to consult with doctors in cities like Sioux Falls, but, she said, there are some specialities that simply can't remotely do consultations.

"Some are impossible, such as OBGYN, general surgery and orthopedics, because those are procedure-oriented, whereas some of the other ones are more consultation-oriented," Luebke said. "I wish we could get them all on telemedicine, and maybe someday we will, but I think we've come a long way already."

As a family medicine physician, Luebke treats patients from "womb to tomb and everything in between."

And Nicole Neugebauer said Luebke's passion for patients is obvious both in and out of the office.

A 17-year coworker and patient of Luebke's, Neugebauer said she has seen firsthand on multiple occasions Luebke's dedication to providing the best patient care for Douglas County residents.

"She puts her patients first and is always advocating for them, and that's something she's very dedicated to is the health of her patients," Neugebauer said. "She puts a personal aspect into things, which is really great."

But finding balance between caring for her patients and caring for her family has been Luebke's greatest struggle since starting in medicine. As a woman, she said, it is her natural instinct to be the caregiver for her family, but it is also her instinct to be the caregiver for her patient. Balancing the two and ensuring neither feels neglected is difficult, she said and seemingly impossible at times.

But, with the help of her late husband, Doug, the "juggling act" was made easier.

Doug died last year, but Luebke said he was instrumental in maintaining home life and raising their two children, Austin and Sarah, while she was attending school and working, which demanded the majority of her time.

"He was very supportive and maintained the residence in Corsica while I was in Vermillion and Sioux Falls, and that was seven years of separation during the week and being together on the weekend when possible," Luebke said. "He did a lot of childcare for our family and always was behind me and supported any of my dreams and goals."

Luebke attended college in St. Louis, then medical school from 1982 to 1986 at the University of South Dakota. Following graduation from medical school, Luebke did her residency at the Family Practice Center, now called the Center for Family Medicine, in Sioux Falls, then began her practice at the Douglas County Memorial Hospital.

And Luebke is no stranger to being the first woman to receive an award or honor.

In 1998 and 1999, she served as the first female president of the South Dakota Academy of Family Physicians. She then became a delegate to the American Academy of Family Physicians Congress of Delegates beginning in 2005 and became a voting delegate in 2010, a position she held until 2013. In total, she and Doug dedicated 15 years to the organization.

"I always had the interest in the sciences, and I guess I hadn't really thought about being a physician, per say, but my brother got admitted to medical school and I kind of emulated him," Luebke said. "Nobody else in my family is in medicine so we're kind of the odd ones out in that way."

But she wouldn't have it any other way.

A long-tenured career has had its ups and downs, but Luebke said Friday she wholeheartedly believes family medicine is the only speciality for her.

And being recognized as this the 2017 Family Doctor of the Year, what she considers the highest honor any physician in the state can receive, simply reaffirms her beliefs.

"I would say it has me feeling even more comfortable in what I do," Luebke said. "It's an affirmation that gives you a more positive outlook that maybe you're not out here struggling by yourself, that maybe you are doing something right."

Continued here:

SD's top family medicine physician hopes for improved rural access to health care - WDAZ

How World War I Revolutionized Medicine – The Atlantic

When World War I broke out in France, in August 1914, getting a wounded soldier from the battlefield to a hospital required horse-drawn wagons or mules with baskets on either side. Incapacitated soldiers would be taken to a railway station, put in the straw of a cattle-car, and sent towards the nearest city with a hospital. No bandages, no food, no water. One of those trains had dumped about 500 badly wounded men and left them lying between the tracks in the rain, with no cover whatsoever, recounted Harvey Cushing, the head of the Harvard Unit of volunteer doctors at the American Ambulance Hospital of Paris.

Such pitiful conditions immediately beset the Battle of the Marne in early September, leaving a thousand wounded French soldiers lying in the straw in a village near Meaux. To rescue them, U.S. Ambassador Myron T. Herrick called all his friends with cars, particularly those on the board of the American Hospital, a small expatriate facility that had just refurbished a school building as a military hospital. This impromptu fleet brought back 34 wounded on the first run, and returned for more. It made the difference between life and death, amputation and healing, and it signaled the start of the motor-ambulance corps.

Medicine, in World War I, made major advances in several directions. The war is better known as the first mass killing of the 20th centurywith an estimated 10 million military deaths alonebut for the injured, doctors learned enough to vastly improve a soldiers chances of survival. They went from amputation as the only solution, to being able to transport soldiers to hospital, to disinfect their wounds and to operate on them to repair the damage wrought by artillery. Ambulances, antiseptic, and anesthesia, three elements of medicine taken entirely for granted today, emerged from the depths of suffering in the First World War.

In the early stages of the war, especially within six weeks, 300,000 French soldiers were woundedand as competent surgeons were not to be had for more than a minority, an appalling number of needless amputations were made. In strictest confidence, Tuffier told me with tears in his eyes that more than 20,000 amputations had been made, George Crile, a volunteer physician from Clevelands Lakeside Hospital, wrote in his diary in January 1915.

The key dilemma was that doctors had no effective antiseptic to kill the rampant bacteria, such as Clostridium perfringens, which causes the rapid necrosis known as gas gangrene. The soldiers lived in the filth of the trenches, and if they were wounded, their injuries were immediately corrupted with it. Thodore Tuffier, a leading French surgeon, testified in 1915 to the Academy of Medicine that 70 percent of amputations were due to infection, not to the initial injury.

Professor Tuffier stated that antiseptics had not proven satisfactory, that cases of gas gangrene were most difficult to handle, Crile wrote. All penetrating wounds of the abdomen, he said, die of shock and infection. He himself tried in fifteen instances to perform immediate operations in cases of penetrating abdominal wounds, and he lost every case. In fact, they have abandoned any attempt to operate penetrating wounds of the abdomen. All wounds large and small are infected. The usual antiseptics, bichloride, carbolic, iodine, etc., fail.

Help was on the way from the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research in New York. The French physician Alexis Carrel, who had been working at the Rockefeller Institute before the war, had signed up with the French army and was given an abandoned chteau in Compigne, near the front, to renovate into a military hospital. He demanded an X-ray machine and laboratories for analysis. When the French Service Sanitaire declined to provide them, Carrel turned to the Rockefeller Institute. They sent equipment, and most important of all, they sent Henry Dakin, a British biochemist who had perfected a solution of sodium hypochlorite, which killed the dangerous bacteria without burning the flesh. Carrel took the new antiseptic and insisted on opening up wounds to thoroughly irrigate them. The technique, which became known as the Carrel-Dakin Method, was adopted by doctors across Europe during the war.

Over at the American Ambulance Hospital, meanwhile, George Crile was introducing doctors to a method of anesthesia he and a nurse named Agatha Hodgins had developed in Cleveland. In January 1915, their Lakeside Unit had begun a series of three-month rotations in Neuilly. Crile had brought with him 18 large cylinders3,000 gallonsof nitrous oxide. He gave surgical demonstrations using a nitrous oxide-oxygen mixjust enough to put a patient to sleep, but not into a state of shockfor Carrel, Dakin, and other French surgeons.

As to nitrous oxid [sic] the progress of opinion among the doctors has been to first scorn, then wonder and admire. Miss Hodgins gave it by special request to one of Dr. Du Bouchets patients who underwent a prolonged nerve operation. He was delighted at the result. Todaya final triumphshe was asked to give it for the French service, Amy Rowland, chief nurse of Lakeside Unit, wrote in a letter in January 1915.

Antiseptics and anesthesia saved lives once they arrived at the hospital, but without motor ambulances and hospital trains to get them there, wounded soldiers stood little chance. From the impromptu rescue of soldiers from Meaux in September 1914, the American Ambulance Field Service grew to number more than 100 ambulances by the end of the first year of the war. Philanthropists such as Anne Harriman Vanderbilt bought cars, as did civic groups from cities around the United States. The Ford Motor Company donated 10 Model-T chassis to be converted into ambulances.

Volunteer drivers arrived from 48 American universities, and the ranks of the ambulance service grew to some 2,500 by the end of the war. Harvard had 55 men in France in 1915, driving in the pitch night on gutted roads to pick up soldiers from field stations just behind the lines. While saving others, 21 of these Harvard men lost their own lives. Richard Hall was the first, struck by a mortar on Bitschwiller Road near Moosch on Christmas Eve, 1915. His fellow driver Tracy Putnam described having driven past the wreck earlier in the evening and not realizing it was Halls ambulance.

[The mortar] struck Dick Halls car just behind the front seat; it must have been quite a big one, for it blew the car completely off the road, bent in the frame, smashed to match-wood the light body, flattened out the tins of petrol. Dick was wounded in three places, the head, the side and the thigh, and killed at once. His body lay there, among the wreck of his car, all night. Our merry convoy passed without seeing it. I saw one of the gasoline cans by the side of the road, and stopped to pick it up, wondering who dropped it.

The service of the drivers, along with the doctors, nurses and social workers who brought the number of American volunteers to the thousands, did not go unnoticed by the French. One of the volunteers, a driver named Leslie Buswell, based at heavily bombarded Pont--Mousson in 1915, wrote in a letter home that the stoicism of the wounded French soldiers was remarkable. When they are unloaded it is a common thing to see a soldier, probably suffering the pain of the damned, make an effort to take the hand of the American helper. I tell you tears are pretty near sometimes.

What inspired these major advances in medicine? There was a deep need, and people stepped up to find solutions. The new technology of warheavy artillery, long-range cannons, barrage shelling, and machine gunsrained devastation at unprecedented levels. Medicine had to try to keep up. One good example of this evolution is in facial reconstruction surgery. Soldiers survived having jaws and noses shattered by artillery fragments, so surgeons at the American Hospital and Val-de-Grace Hospital pioneered maxillofacial techniques, and at the same time, brought dentistry into the medical sciences in France.

Just before he sailed back to the United States in March 1915, George Crile organized a day-long conference at the American Hospital for 100 physicians and diplomats to show them the new techniques and methods that had been developed. Alexis Carrel gave a talk entitled: Science has perfected the art of killing: Why not that of saving? That evening, at dinner at the Hotel Ritz, doctors gathered from France, Britain and the United States whose work was doing just that, from developing a vaccine for typhoid to figuring out how to defeat sepsis. The war had drawn a framework of urgency around such medical questions, and the doctors stepped up to answer them.

Mary Merritt Crawford, the only woman doctor at the American Hospital during the war, later noted that war brought death and destruction, yet also opened the path to progress: A war benefits medicine more than it benefits anybody else. Its terrible, of course, but it does.

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How World War I Revolutionized Medicine - The Atlantic

Canada Today: South Korean Hockey, Biking to the Border and Medicine Hat’s Money – New York Times


New York Times
Canada Today: South Korean Hockey, Biking to the Border and Medicine Hat's Money
New York Times
Medicine Hat, Alberta, is one of the last cities in North America to own its energy resources. It has about 4,000 gas wells and its own gas-fired power plant, and it is a leader in municipally owned renewable energy, with a wind farm and a solar ...
Improvements to Seniors and Community Housing Coming to Medicine HatMarketwired (press release)

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Canada Today: South Korean Hockey, Biking to the Border and Medicine Hat's Money - New York Times

Syrian Doctors And The American Dream: Practicing Medicine In A New Immigration Landscape – Health Affairs (blog)

Becoming a physician is a lifelong dream for many. Having the opportunity to train in the United States is also a deeply held ambition for countless aspiring doctors around the globe.

We are living out that dream. We came to the U.S. from Syria, a war-torn country in the Middle East, with the same goal: to attain highly specialized training at the best U.S. institutions. We had the idea that the U.S. had the best medical and research universities and hospitals in the world. Later, when we all made it here and started our journeys, our experiences came to confirm our initial impressions. Many great countries are on the frontiers of science, technology, and medical practice. However, the United States stands out from the crowd in that it attracts individuals with great passion for and high skills in what they do. Indeed, being a hub for the brightest and most talented minds has contributed immensely to U.S. strength in so many domains and for more than two centuries.

Some of us came into the U.S. more than a decade ago while others only a few years ago. All of us, however, share the profession of medical practice and research. We have studied and worked at some of the nations most reputable institutions across the U.S. We all have a strong passion and drive in different fields of biomedical, translational, and clinical research. Many of us also provide medical care for many patients across clinical disciplines. Some of us also provide that patient care in underserved areas.

Syria was one of the countries specified in President Trumps January 27 executive order (EO) on immigration. This EO was issued to protect the U.S. and Americans from potential terrorists. It detailed a ban on legal immigrants as well as non-immigrant visas from seven countries for 90 days, a 120-day ban on admitting refugees, and an indefinite ban on admitting refugees from Syria. For days after the order was announced, any individual with a legal visa from these countries was prevented from entering the United States regardless of their qualifications, skills, or expertise.

The executive order drew rapid litigation and on February 3, a federal judge temporarily prohibited the government from enforcing the order on equal protection grounds and due process guarantees. The Trump administration, however, has signaled it intends to rewrite the order, and on February 21 it issued new directives to the Department of Homeland Security to deport unauthorized immigrants. This will likely not be the final say on the matter, however, and the potential for blocking immigrants and refugees from Syria and other Middle Eastern countries from coming to the U.S. is still very real.

This EO had grave ramifications for thousands of people holding legal status and visas all across the U.S., those flying in, and those who were outside. It also had great personal impact on many of us, our families, friends, and colleagues. From our experience, we believe that the orders impact would be deeply felt across the medical professions. Any ban citing a persons national origin, religion, race, or ethnicity is very counterproductive to keeping and attracting international expertise into the U.S. health care system.

Even before the EO, Syrian medical students and graduates who wanted to continue their training in the US faced significant obstacles. For example, International Medical Graduates must first receive a visa to come to the US in order to be present for the USMLE Step2 CS exam as well as for interviews, both of which are necessary to be matched with a residency program. In September 2016, we conducted a brief survey of 106 Syrian medical students and graduates currently applying to be matched with a US residency program. Of our survey participants, more than 50 percent had to apply twice or more to be approved for a visa to the US and some even had to apply five times or more. What is more, all of them also had to visit a US embassy outside of Syria in order to apply for that visa that is because the U.S. embassy in Syria closed in February 2012. More than a quarter (28 percent) of those surveyed said they had to travel to two or more countries to apply for a visa. It is no wonder that many respondents reported declining interest among their peers in pursuing medical training in the U.S. That has not always been the case: As recently as 2014 University of Damascus, Syria, was among the top ten medical schools from which international medical graduates currently licensed in the US, had graduated. We fear that is likely to change.

After arriving in the U.S. and joining clinical training, research, or graduate degree programs, we found the U.S. system to be just and merit-based. When we came in, most of us had either a student or a work visa. What we found was that the educational opportunities spurred and surrounded those who worked hard, regardless of their background. A clich, but it has never been truer for us. This system, although not perfect, is one of Americas greatest points of strength.

When we look back at the diverse backgrounds of the many wonderful mentors and educators we had in the U.S., we cannot help but think how deficient our training would have been without them. We grew personally and professionally. And as our expertise expanded, our contributions to the U.S. communities that welcomed us expanded as well. Collectively, we have written hundreds of peer-reviewed publications, advanced medical science, and educated myriad of clinical and research personnel. Most importantly, since anti-immigrant rhetoric started to appear in the political arena during and after the election, we were told many heartwarming and empathic words of support from our patients and colleagues. We draw much strength and resolve from their support as we struggle to continue our lives and careers here in the U.S.

The views expressed in this article are of the authors only and do not represent the views of their employers.

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Syrian Doctors And The American Dream: Practicing Medicine In A New Immigration Landscape - Health Affairs (blog)

Food: Powerful Medicine to Defend Against Cancer – Environmental Working Group

Food: Powerful Medicine to Defend Against Cancer
Environmental Working Group
WASHINGTON What we eat is strongly and intricately linked to our health. No food or nutrient is a panacea against disease, but eating right can help prevent many serious diseases, including heart disease, diabetes and several types of cancer. To help ...

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Food: Powerful Medicine to Defend Against Cancer - Environmental Working Group

Nurse allegedly stole boy’s medicine, his death ruled a homicide – KXAN.com


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Nurse allegedly stole boy's medicine, his death ruled a homicide
KXAN.com
ALLEGAN, Mich. (WOOD) Detectives are investigating a caregiver after a 4-year-old boy with disabilities died, alleging she stole some of the medicine that was meant to keep him alive, according to the boy's autopsy report. Ryley Maue of Allegan died ...

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Nurse allegedly stole boy's medicine, his death ruled a homicide - KXAN.com