November 14th, 2010 by DrWes in Better Health Network, Health Policy, Health Tips, Medical Art, News, Opinion
Tags: Cardiopulmonology, Cigarette Labels, Dangers Of Smoking, Dr. Wes Fisher, Family Medicine, FDA, Food and Drug Administration, General Medicine, Health Risks Of Smoking, Internal Medicine, Oncology, Patient Education, Primary Care, Public Awareness, Public Health, Quitting Smoking, smoking cessation, Stop Smoking, Tobacco Products
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The FDA will soon require new cigarette package labeling to deter smoking. So in politically-correct governmental fashion, they are asking which labels you’d like to see. (You can pick your favorites here.) My personal favorite (so far) is the one shown to the left, but its impact factor pales in comparison to this example found in England. (That, my friends, is cancer!)
Ironically, it appears the FDA isn’t too sure how forceful it should be in these warnings about the dangers of smoking. They offer a cornucopia of milquetoast labeling options, many of which contain cartoons. Might such unrealistic portrayals defy they hard-hitting message they want to project? Worse, at least one cartoon (seen here) even seems to promote cigarettes AND drug use together!
In an even more astonishing example, some images almost make me what to take up smoking so I can blow big bubbles. Since I could never do this well before, maybe I should take up smoking! Seriously, is an empowerment message what the government wants to portray?
Make these labels big, ugly, and real. Anything else is a waste of taxpayer’s money.
-WesMusings of a cardiologist and cardiac electrophysiologist.
*This blog post was originally published at Dr. Wes*
November 14th, 2010 by DrCharles in Better Health Network, Health Policy, News, Opinion
Tags: Crying Spells, Depression, Emotional Health, Emotional Stability, Emotional Well-Being, Healthcare Politics, John Boehner, Leadership, Mental Health, Mental Illness, Psychiatry and Psychology, Psychological Health, The Examining Room of Dr. Charles, The New York Times
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When the Republicans took back the House of Representatives [recently], John Boehner, the presumptive new Speaker and current Senator from Ohio, unleashed a “sob heard round the world.” As The New York Times quotes:
“I’ve spent my whole life chasing the American dream,” (Boehner) said, beginning to cry. He swallowed and tried again. But describing all the bad jobs he had once led to near sobbing when he got to the line, “I poured my heart and soul into running a small business.”
Boehner has cried in public many other times, the recent election night being only the largest stage to date. The tears also flow at his annual golf tournament, or while watching a child pledge allegiance to the flag, listening to a Republican colleague speak about his Vietnam War experiences, the unveiling of a statue of Ronald Reagan, while accepting various awards, during a rendition of “America the Beautiful,” etc. Could these tears be signs of major depression? Should melancholy be a disqualification for leadership? Were Clinton’s tears any better? Read more »
*This blog post was originally published at The Examining Room of Dr. Charles*
November 14th, 2010 by Edwin Leap, M.D. in Better Health Network, Opinion, True Stories
Tags: Dr. Edwin Leap, General Medicine, Hospital Auxiliary Association, Hospital Volunteers, Medical Volunteer Efforts, Patient Care, Retirees, Volunteerism
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Here is a talk I gave last week to our hospital auxiliary association, mostly made up of retired volunteers. They give us so much, and this is my tribute to them.
Capacity, utility and volunteers
Thank you for letting me speak to you tonight. It is an honor. I have today been at two different ends of the medical world . Today at lunch, I spoke to a Christian Medical Student’s association at USC in Columbia, SC. And now, I am honored to speak to you, who do so much to keep the hospital functioning by your gift of volunteerism.
Tonight I want to talk about capacity and functionality. About utility and usefulness. In preparing to do so, I began to think about how I became the way I am, and my mind wandered to ancestry. I suppose that ancestry has much to do with who we are, though I doubt it is the sole determinant. Read more »
*This blog post was originally published at edwinleap.com*
November 14th, 2010 by Davis Liu, M.D. in Better Health Network, News, Opinion, Research
Tags: Blood Tests, Cleveland Clinic, Doctor-Patient Communication, Dr. Davis Liu, Family Health History, Family Medical History, Family Medicine, General Medicine, Genetic Testing, Genetics, Imaging Studies, Internal Medicine, Lab Tests, Medical History Form, Overtesting, Patient Resume, Patient's Social History, Primary Care, Saving Money and Surviving the Healthcare Crisis, Talking to Patients, Too Much Testing
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The Associated Press ran a provocatively-titled piece recently, “Family health history: ‘best kept secret’ in care”, which noted how a geneticist at the Cleveland Clinic discovered that asking about family members and their history of breast, colon, or prostate cancer was better than simply doing genetic blood testing.
Surprising? Hardly. This is what all medical students are taught. Talk to the patient. Get a detailed history and physical. Lab work and imaging studies are merely tools that can help support or refute a diagnosis. They provide a piece of the puzzle, but always must be considered in the full context of a patient. They alone do not provide the truth. Read more »
*This blog post was originally published at Saving Money and Surviving the Healthcare Crisis*
November 12th, 2010 by Happy Hospitalist in Better Health Network, Health Tips, Opinion, True Stories
Tags: Cigarettes, Dangers Of Smoking, Happy Hospitalist, Health Risks Of Smoking, Nicotine Use, Pesticide Use, Pulmonology, Quitting Smoking, Smokers, Tobacco, Tobacco Farming, Tobacco Products, Vegetable Farmers
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I had a fascinating discussion with an ex-tobacco farming expert. He’s an expert because he used to grow tobacco, but not anymore. If you’re a smoker, or user of any tobacco leaf product, what he said should shock you. I take that back — you’re a smoker: “shocked” is never going to happen to you.
What did he say that was so striking? I’m not a farmer, so it became a little difficult to understand all the science behind the conversation. Needless to say, he said they used to farm vegetables and tobacco side by side. He said something about potato farming being timed with tobacco crops, and when the potato market went south he got out of the tobacco farming business for good and went with just vegetables. Now he’s a full-time vegetable farmer.
While he was a tobacco farmer, how did he run his tobacco farm? Like I said, he grew vegetables and tobacco side-by-side. He used different pesticides for the vegetables than he did for the tobacco farming. He farmed based on the concept that people who ate vegetables were looking for a healthy food. So he used pesticides in their lowest recommended concentration and applied them at the longest recommended time frame between applications and used the safest formulations available. None of his chemicals carried the skull-and-crossbones warning. And what about the tobacco farming? Read more »
*This blog post was originally published at The Happy Hospitalist*