Showing posts with label June-July. Show all posts
Showing posts with label June-July. Show all posts

Top medicine articles for June-July 2012

Here are my suggestions for some of the top articles in medicine for June-July 2012:

Should You Put Sunscreen on Infants? It’s best not to use sunscreen on infants under age 6 months - FDA http://buff.ly/LxmJ0u

Guillain-Barre Syndrome - NEJM review http://buff.ly/LxmC55

Long-term use of low-dose azithromycin as an attractive adjunct treatment option for COPD http://buff.ly/LAoNVi

71% of doctors believe quality of healthcare will deteriorate over the next 5 years (19-page survey summary, PDF) http://goo.gl/Sl0wd

Americans' confidence in the U.S. medical system is around the historical average of 39% http://goo.gl/KoTqI

FDA Approves Diet Pill Belviq http://bit.ly/LCvE0o

What is So Good About Growing Old: mind gets sharper at a number of vitally important abilities http://goo.gl/6xI8M

A Lithium Battery in a Hotdog: the picture burns itself into mind - keep out of reach of small children http://buff.ly/LSmPBS

People who remember being pushed or slapped as children more likely to have depression or anxiety later in life http://goo.gl/oTt7p

Physical Punishment Has Long-Lasting Consequences on Children's Mental Health (study) http://buff.ly/LKGrl6

GSK once-daily lung drug LAMA/LABA (umeclidinium/vilanterol) showed positive results in COPD http://goo.gl/s1o0P

1 in 5 Nurses is Depressed - 18% of hospital-employed nurses have depression; twice the rate of the general public http://goo.gl/aioSn

The Medication Generation: Many young people today have now spent most of their lives on antidepressants - WSJ http://on.wsj.com/LLDuVE

Publishing a medical journal is a very profitable activity, says former BMJ Editor-in-Chief and provides examples http://goo.gl/QeaKS

Health Care Mandate Puts a "Cranky Uncle" in Every Exam Room - NYTimes http://goo.gl/v0PpH

The articles were selected from my Twitter and Google Reader streams. Please feel free to send suggestions for articles to clinicalcases@gmail.com and you will receive acknowledgement in the next edition of this publication.

Top medicine articles for June-July 2013

Here are my suggestions for some of the top articles in medicine for June-July 2013:

Does Cigarette Smoking Make You Ugly and Old? Am. J. Epidemiol. Association of smoking and facial wrinkling may convince young persons not to begin smoking & older smokers to quit http://buff.ly/16g6NJe

"I COUGH" mnemonic: Reducing Postoperative Pulmonary Complications http://buff.ly/1e7ln6J

Perioperative beta blockers linked to lower 30-day mortality in patients with 2 or more Revised Cardiac Risk Index http://buff.ly/14PlJQq

"Trimethylamine-N-oxide (TMAO) is the new enemy within. We make it in our bowels" http://buff.ly/ZiM7KA

An Exercise Plan for Middle Age: walking is, physiologically and logistically, the simplest exercise. Or just do push-ups and squats in your living room. Start with one push-up, if that’s all that you can do, and progress to 15 or 20. http://buff.ly/10Ro3Fd

Adenotonsillectomy for Childhood Sleep Apnea does not improve attention or executive function. However, as compared with the watchful-waiting group, the early-adenotonsillectomy group had significant improvement on polysomnographic, behavioral, symptomatic, and quality-of-life measures. However, 46% of the patients in the watchful-waiting group had a normalization of polysomnographic findings after 7 months - NEJM http://buff.ly/167Vndb and http://bit.ly/14xa1WZ

Short Stature - NEJM blog http://bit.ly/XoQ8Sj

Psychiatrist:“It’s not ‘doing nothing. It’s ‘doing no-thing" http://buff.ly/14A9WD3 -- Don't Do Something; Just Sit There - NYTimes.

Dog ownership is associated with decreased cardiovascular risk (AHA Scientific Statement) http://buff.ly/11zNHaZ

Don’t Take Your Vitamins - NYTimes: Supplemental vitamins A, C, E and beta carotene, taken to prevent cancers, actually increased mortality. What explains the connection between supplemental vitamins and increased rates of cancer and mortality? Antioxidants. Free radicals aren’t as evil as advertised. People need them to kill bacteria and eliminate new cancer cells http://buff.ly/11zO7OF

How to interpret surveys in medical research: A practical approach from the Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine http://buff.ly/13CGs7g

Electronic siloing: An unintended consequence of the electronic health record http://buff.ly/167i7Fh -- "We asked for the EHR to look like paper, and we got it, and that has truly affected the way we practice & interact" http://buff.ly/13CHf87 -- Physician and EMR: "Some patients offer to type in their information for me—a bonding experience I could do without" http://buff.ly/13CHq3g

Paget disease of bone: Diagnosis and drug therapy - free review from CCJM 2013 http://buff.ly/167idwF

Practical management of bleeding due to the anticoagulants dabigatran, rivaroxaban, and apixaban - free review, CCJM http://buff.ly/167iUpO

A Decade of Reversal: An Analysis of 146 Contradicted Medical Practices http://bit.ly/163NNf6 -- Blog comment: Every 10 years scientific evidence causes a reversal of established medical practice in 40% of reported studies http://buff.ly/16g6VIU

The articles were selected from my Twitter and RSS streams. Please feel free to send suggestions for articles to clinicalcases AT gmail.com and you will receive acknowledgement in the next edition of this publication.