1.31.2007

Books about Medicine

Here are a few that I think are good portrayals of disease affected life and medicine. Some of them I have mentioned at random times in class. If you ever want a break from textbooks and syllabi, I think these provide some good lessons.

1) Cry Bloody Murder, Elaine DePrince. Hemophilia A and Factor VIII HIV infection. Written by an angry mother and sometimes can be overwhelming, it is moving nonetheless.

2) The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down, by Anne Fadiman. Epilepsy and the Hmong culture interaction with US MDs. Excellent read.

3) The Noonday Demon by Andrew Solomon - a good depiction of depression. Informative.

4) The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, Mark Haddal. A well-written, quick read about autism.

5) Complications, Atul Gawande. Well written journal from a surgeon discussing a variety of issues in medicine.

6) Anatomy of Hope, Jerome Groopman. Interesting discussion of the role of hope, faith and religion in healing.

7) Stiff, Mary Roach. The subtitle of this book is the lives of human cadavers, and it is an interesting read.

8) Tuesdays with Morrie, Mitch Albom. A widely read story of a professor dying from Amytropic Lateral Sclerosis (Lou Gehrig's Disease).

If anyone has any thoughts or suggestions about these or any others, please post them!

1.27.2007

Things that must go...


1. Spelling things wrong to be clever in a name. Yeah, let's act illiterate to get attention.

2. News anchors who use ridiculous segways to go from news to weather or sports. (Turning to the meteorologist after a story on Barrack Obama) "Well, how about those black storm clouds overhead?!?"

3. Waiters who ask if the infants in the party would like a kid menu. "Yes, the five-month-old baby would like a Kid's Super Burger. Thanks."

4. Speed limits that change every few hundred yards (welcome to North Salt Lake).

5. The term "pop music" being used to insult a particular artist. I happen to love pop music and there was a day when it didn't mean Spears, Simpson, or Duff.

6. Plumber's crack...it sneaks up on you when you least expect it.

7. The price of textbooks. "Let me just take out a second mortgage on my house...I'll be right back."

8. Personalized license plates like "Foxxy" or "Hotty." Shut up.

9. Oh yeah, and those big huge trucks whose drivers plaster them with decals about how macho they are. There was a guy who had some vulgar, sexist phrase along his cab window that was a play on the word "stroke" (referring to his diesel engine, I presume) that made me gag. Oh yeah, and those naked lady silhouettes on the mud flaps. The symbolism there is unmistakable. A naked lady who is covered in road grime. Sir, I now know a lot more about how you view the female sex.

10. Colin Farrell. Anyone seen this guy actually act. I mean, I have seen him appear on screen in costume...but that's about it.

1.25.2007

Site notes

Hey everyone, check out the column on the right side of this page - I've added a bunch of course sites and a couple other useful links. If you have other suggestions, please let me know. The links are easy to add.

Isn't this just duplicating information on UMED? Actually, no - I haven't been able to find some of the links on UMED. And even if they're all there, it's nice to have some redundancy when UMED is down.

One more thing - this isn't my personal blog (or T^2's)! We'd love to hear from more of you!

8-)

1.20.2007

Thinking about the future....

UPDATE: I also posted this article at the Student Doctor Network, where it has generated some interesting debate.



From the latest American Medical News:

Fatal errors more likely on 24-hour call

Harvard sleep scientists say residents' hours still put patients at risk.

By Myrle Croasdale, AMNews staff. Jan. 22, 2007.


Patients are dying at the hands of tired medical residents, according to Harvard sleep scientists, because the work-hour limits imposed in 2003 are not preventing sleep deprivation.

Their research reveals that first-year medical school graduates who worked five shifts of 24 hours or more during a month were three times more likely to make an error that contributed to a patient's death.

"Academic medicine is failing these doctors and their patients by requiring exhausted doctors to work 30-hour marathon shifts," said Charles Czeisler, MD, PhD, co-author of the study and director of sleep medicine at Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston. "The human brain doesn't function correctly when working 30 hours straight."

David C. Leach, MD, executive director of the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education, the organization that regulates resident hours, said trimming call hours further would not necessarily improve patient safety.

"[Dr.] Czeisler's study has given us a little truth," Dr. Leach said. "Residents who work 24 hours self-report they are prone to more errors. He has not given us a deeper truth. The problem is more complex than 16- vs. 24-hour shifts."

The study builds on previous research from Harvard that compared interns who worked an average of 80 hours a week with call periods of 24 hours and longer, to interns working 63 hours a week, with call limited to 16 hours. The interns working the longer schedule made 36% more serious medical errors.

The study, in the December 2006 issue of the online journal PloS Medicine, looked specifically at fatigue-related errors that harmed patients. It found that interns who had worked one to four overnight call shifts in a month were three times more likely to report at least one fatigue-related event that hurt a patient.

If they worked five or more shifts in a month, they were seven times more likely to report at least one adverse event. Under ACGME rules, interns can work up to nine 30-hour call periods a month.

"Extended-duration work shifts are hazardous to patients," Dr. Czeisler said. "We need to be concerned about safety and think creatively about alternatives. It's time to rethink [resident hours.]"

Over the course of a year, one out of 20 interns made a serious error that injured a patient. One out of 100 made a mistake that was serious enough to result in a patient's death, Dr. Czeisler said.

"The data suggest tens of thousands of patients are being injured each year, and thousands are dying in relation to fatigue mistakes," he said.

Dr. Leach questioned such reasoning. The data were collected in July 2002 through May 2003, before duty-hour reforms were instituted. Dr. Czeisler said the data were applicable because residents still work call shifts of 24 hours or more. But Dr. Leach said the accumulated sleep debt from longer work weeks may have produced higher error rates than would be found under the current system.

1.15.2007

Why Mommy Is A Democrat


I probably shouldn't be posting this, but I find it too amusing not to share. Has anyone heard of the picture book, Why Mommy Is A Democrat? It's this children's book themed around the Democratic party agenda (but not endorsed by the Democratic Party, although politicians holding office have endorsed it). Now, I'm very, very liberal but this is a little weird even for me. I only wonder what would have happened had my mother bought me a book that was called Why Mommy Is A Republican? I'm pretty sure I would have had a thorough understanding of tax brackets at an early age.

Here the site.

1.01.2007

Happy 2007!

Go here to make your own fireworks:

http://www.maylin.net/Fireworks.html