January 27th, 2010 by Emergiblog in Better Health Network, True Stories
Tags: Emergency Medicine, Migraine, Nursing, Pain Killers, Pain Management, Pain Medication, Slow, Wait Times
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Migraine.
Three days.
Out of pain medication and vomiting so you wouldn’t keep it down, anyway.
Agony.
Emergency department.
*****
You’re in luck – no one in triage!
A bed opens up, the nurse takes you straight to a room.
Gown, blanket.
And….
Two minutes later you send your cousin out to ask how long it will be until you get your pain med.
Excuse me? Read more »
*This blog post was originally published at Emergiblog*
January 27th, 2010 by StaceyButterfield in Better Health Network, News, Research
Tags: Deployment, Depression, Diabetes, Diet, Internal Medicine, Mental Health, Ophthalmology, Spouses, War
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This week’s obvious news consists of findings that you might have hoped weren’t true, but really you already knew they were.
First, sending your spouse off to war will make you unhappy, according to the New England Journal. “Among wives of soldiers deployed for up to 11 months, researchers found almost 3,500 more diagnoses of depression, anxiety, sleep disorders and other mental health issues than among wives who husbands stayed home,” reported HealthDay. Guess these women actually liked their husbands!
Then, it turns out that diabetics should not pig out, especially on salt, according to the Archives of Ophthalmology via HealthDay. A study of black patients with diabetes found that those who ate more calories and more sodium were more likely to develop diabetic retinopathy. “These results suggest that low caloric and sodium intakes in African-American individuals with type 1 diabetes mellitus…might be part of dietary recommendations for this population,” the authors concluded. Shoot, now we will have throw out those “hot dog a day keeps the doctor away” guidelines.

*This blog post was originally published at ACP Hospitalist*
January 27th, 2010 by DrRob in Better Health Network, True Stories
Tags: Death, Died Well, Disease, Dying, Dying Well, Family Medicine, Internal Medicine, Mortality, Palliative Care, Patients
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One of my favorite patients died last week.
My reaction to this was not quite what you would think: I smiled. No, I didn’t smile because of his death; I smiled because of his life. I smiled because I got to be a part of that life. His death wasn’t his tragic end, it was the exclamation point to his life.
I am around a lot of death – it’s one of the things that makes being a doctor different from other jobs. My goal with all of my patients is to keep them healthy, to relieve their pain, and to do my best to keep them alive. Ultimately, though, it’s a losing battle; 100% of them will eventually die. That’s why I don’t like statistics about how many people who die due to inadequate doctoring. Our job is to resist an irresistible force. We are standing up to the hurricane, the avalanche, the flood. Read more »
*This blog post was originally published at Musings of a Distractible Mind*
January 27th, 2010 by Happy Hospitalist in Better Health Network, Health Policy, Opinion
Tags: Choice, COPD, Critical Care Medicine, healthcare, Internal Medicine, Personal Responsibility, Physicians, Responsibility, smoking, Spending, Tough Love
1 Comment »

Have you ever stopped bothering to care about a patient? A doctor sent me his own personal account of the smoking Mr Jones:
Dear Happy. I read your article on bounce backs with great interest, and was astonished by some of the vitriol it elicited. I remember having one COPDer bounce back to me three times within a month at the VA when I was a medicine resident. He would leave, smoke and drink, and then come back and be readmitted to my service with exactly the same course each time. It was like Groundhog Day.
Finally I had a little talk with him and said: “Mr. Jones, each time you come in, you’re on death’s door. So I come down to the ER, stay up with you all night and save your life. But you know, I’m really getting tired of having you come in after drinking and smoking and then working like a dog to save your life. So let me tell you, if you don’t quit smoking, the next time you do this there’s a good chance that I’m not going to bother. Why should I? It doesn’t seem to be doing either of us any good.”
To my complete astonishment, he actually quit smoking and stayed quit for about a year. Then he fell off the wagon, deteriorated too far before getting to the hospital and died. I was frankly proud of him for the effort, but somehow suspect that I’d be shot in a drive-by if I ever told that story in public. Read more »
*This blog post was originally published at The Happy Hospitalist Blog*
January 26th, 2010 by PhilBaumannRN in Better Health Network, Expert Interviews, Opinion
Tags: Advertising, AdWords, Google, MyLikes, Nursing, Predictions, Social Media, Technology, Twitter
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Do you advertise on your social networks? You might not think that you do, but every time you tweet or update your status on Facebook or post a picture to Flickr, you’re advertising – perhaps not with commercial or self-promotional intent, but you are advertising something: an item of news, a humorous post or a moment from your vacation. I don’t believe that Advertising is bad; but there is bad advertising, the kind that pointlessly interrupts and annoys and leads to no action.
As the Web expands and evolves from a tangle of static web pages towards social and real time streams, Advertising will need to evolve into a suppler and friendlier animal. Google may have perfected Advertising on the traditional web platform, but the door is open to new players who can socialize advertising. It’s not an easy task: the bull’s eye of targeting customers is getting tinier everyday. Enter MyLikes, a start up which has taken on the task of helping advertisers reach their base. Read more »
*This blog post was originally published at Phil Baumann*