December 19th, 2011 by Michael Kirsch, M.D. in News, Opinion
Tags: Cleveland Browns, Collision, Colt McCoy, Concussion, Conflicts of Interest, Football, Head Injury, medical evaluation, NFL, Procedure, process, Professional Sports, SCAT2, Second Opinion, Standard, Standard Concussion Assessment Tool, Time
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The Cleveland Browns have been in the news this week, and not because of newfound success on the gridiron. While sports is not among my highest priorities, I have developed increasing interest over the years since professional sports is religion to so many here in Cleveland and in Ohio. Cleveland sports teams all enjoy great success, provided that success is not defined by victories. It’s not if you win or lose but how…
I watched the Cleveland Browns compete against the Pittsburgh Steelers two Thursdays ago. I cringed as I witnessed our young quarterback, Colt McCoy, take a blow to the head that could have landed the perpetrator a 10 year prison sentence had this act occurred on the street. I wasn’t worried that McCoy would have to miss the rest of the game. I feared that he might have to miss the rest of his life. Violence sells tickets.
If an activity requires a participant to don a helmet and a coat of armor, then clearly it is an unwise activity for a human to engage in.
McCoy was taken off the field and reentered the arena 2 plays later, after an exhaustive evaluation that was completed in about 100 seconds. Since everything in sports and medicine is now measured, we know that McCoy was sidelined for a total of Read more »
*This blog post was originally published at MD Whistleblower*
December 18th, 2011 by Toni Brayer, M.D. in Health Tips, News
Tags: Annual, Bleeding, Cervical Cancer, Discharge, False Positive, females, Follow Up, Gynecology, HPV, Human Papilloma Virus, Obstetrics, Pain, Pap Smear, Pap Test, Pressure, Screening, sexually transmitted diseases, Women
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Women have been told they should have screening for cervical cancer with a pap test every year. The visit to the gynecologist or internal medicine physician has been a right of passage for most young women and most are very compliant with that annual visit throughout their lives.
Well, the times they are a-changin’ because new guidelines issued by the US Preventative Services Task Force and the American Cancer Society say women should undergo screening NO MORE OFTEN than every 3 years starting at age 21. To further strengthen this recommendation, even the American Society for Clinical Pathology (those folks that read the pap smears) agrees with the recommendation. They also recommend stopping routine pap smears after age 65 for women who have had 3 negative Pap test results in the past 10 years. These women are just not at high risk.
So why the change? Read more »
*This blog post was originally published at EverythingHealth*
December 18th, 2011 by GarySchwitzer in News
Tags: Analysis, Breast Cancer, British Study, Cancer, Harm, HealthDay, Mammography, media, Research, Risk, Screening, Study, Tests
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I’m choosing to blog about a HealthDay story headlined, “British Study Suggests Mammograms Do More Harm Than Good,” rather than do one of our criteria-driven systematic story reviews because our criteria don’t address the bigger picture.
And that bigger picture is this:
In a criteria-driven, systematic story review of another HealthDay story about a Dutch study this week headlined, “Mammograms Cut Risk of Breast Cancer Death by Half, Study Finds,” our review team commented: Read more »
*This blog post was originally published at Health News Review*
December 17th, 2011 by BarbaraFederOstrov in News, Research
Tags: ADHD, AP, Associated Press, British Heath, Cell Phones, Driving, Drug Safety, Forbes.com, Heart Attacks, JAMA, News, NHS, Nurse Strike, Phone Calls, Reporting on Health, Stroke, Texting
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*This blog post was originally published at Reporting on Health - The Reporting on Health Daily Briefing*
December 17th, 2011 by Felasfa Wodajo, M.D. in News
Tags: Bluetooth, Conferences, Featured, Internal Medicine, Medical Device Companies, Medical Device Industry, mHealth, mHealth Summit, Mobile Health, Mobile Health Apps, Sensors, Wireless Healthcare
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One of the major announcements at last week’s mHealth Summit was made by Qualcomm who introduced a new platform for wirelessly connecting medical devices. The 2net platform abstracts away the details of connecting a sensor to a cloud-based server.
Right now, if a company develops a great lightweight sensor to measure, say, walking speed, it will also have to engineer a way for that information to be transferred wirelessly, sometimes across a couple of stops, to its eventual destination somewhere on a server. Although these same challenges repeat for every device, each company has to “reinvent the wheel”.
Additionally, once it arrives at the company’s servers that rich collection of data would still be isolated – in a “data silo”. If another company comes along with a terrific heart rate sensor and suggests, “why don’t we combine the two data streams and make a useful new app”, not only would they have to recreate the entire chain of communication for themselves, the two companies would have to agree to methods for their two servers to talk and share information.
2Net makes almost all of the above problems Read more »
*This blog post was originally published at iMedicalApps*