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Weight Loss Strategies – What Should Doctors Say to Patients?

Yesterday’s Times offered two distinct perspectives on weight loss. One, a detailed feature on gastric surgery by Anemona Hartocollis, details the plight of a young obese woman who opts for Lap-band surgery. In this procedure, surgeons wrap a constricting band of silicone around the stomach so that patients will feel full upon eating less food […]

Posted in Fitness, Nutrition, Patient-Doctor RelationshipTagged , , , , , , , , 1 Comment on Weight Loss Strategies – What Should Doctors Say to Patients?

ACS Issues Annual Report on Cancer Stats: Some Key Findings, and Notes on Survivorship

This week the ACS released its annual report on Cancer Facts and Figures in the U.S. The journal Cancer analyzes and considers the data in a helpful article. Some of the key and mainly positive findings have been covered elsewhere: Between 1990 and 2008, death rates from cancer in the U.S. declined rather steadily, overall, by […]

Posted in cancer survival, Medical News, Oncology (cancer), Public HealthTagged , , , , , , , , 2 Comments on ACS Issues Annual Report on Cancer Stats: Some Key Findings, and Notes on Survivorship

A Note on ‘Trial by Twitter’ and Peer Review in 2012

Nature just published a feature: Trial by Twitter. The piece considers the predicament of researchers who may find themselves ill-prepared to deal with a barrage of unsolicited and immediate on-line “reviews” of their published work. The author of the Nature News piece, science journalist A. Mandavilli, does a great job covering the pros and cons of Twitter “comments” […]

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Blood and Hip Surgery: New Study Supports Fewer Transfusions

Under the radar, over the holiday week, the NEJM published a report on transfusion requirements in older adults who surgical hip repair. The main finding is that most patients, including the elderly and those at risk for cardiac complications of the procedure, don’t benefit from getting so many red blood cell transfusions as is commonly […]

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What Causes Breast Cancer? Reviewing the IOM Report on BC and the Environment

Earlier this month the IOM issued a big report on breast cancer and the environment. The thick analysis, commissioned and sponsored by the Susan G. Komen for the Cure®, was authored by an expert panel. Their task – to assess all available information on what causes BC, and make recommendations accordingly – was essentially impossible. […]

Posted in Breast Cancer, cancer causes, Oncology (cancer), Public HealthTagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , 3 Comments on What Causes Breast Cancer? Reviewing the IOM Report on BC and the Environment

Noting the Death of Christopher Hitchens from Esophageal Cancer

The author is saddened to learn that Christopher Hitchens died late yesterday evening at the age of 62, roughly a year and a half after receiving a diagnosis of esophageal cancer. He was a prolific and articulate man; I respected him for his words. His essays on the language and cancer might be of particular […]

Posted in language, Life as a writer, Medical News, Oncology (cancer)Tagged , , , , , 3 Comments on Noting the Death of Christopher Hitchens from Esophageal Cancer

Why Should Physicians Blog or Use Twitter?

Is a question I ask myself almost every day. When I started this blog, it was partly a response to what I perceived an unbalanced attack on the value of breast cancer screening by the mainstream news outlets. Why it’s continued is, mainly, that I find it liberating and, in a strange way, fun. As […]

Posted in Blogs, Communication, Life as a Doctor, Patient-Doctor Relationship, Social MediaTagged , , , , , , , , , , 4 Comments on Why Should Physicians Blog or Use Twitter?

Quote of the Day: On Death Panels and the Insurance Industry, From Dr. Donald Berwick

Dr. Donald Berwick left his position last week as head of CMS. He said this, as quoted in the WSJ’s Washington Wire, yesterday: “Maybe a real death panel is a group of people who tell health care insurers that is it OK to take insurance away from people because they are sick or are at […]

Posted in health care delivery, Medical Ethics, Medical News, Policy, Quote of the DayTagged , , , , , , , , 1 Comment on Quote of the Day: On Death Panels and the Insurance Industry, From Dr. Donald Berwick

Learning From the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium, At a Distance

There’s a ton of BC and women’s health news this week. But yours truly is, among other things, not in San Antonio where is the 34th annual San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium. NTW, quite a few major news outlets are covering this business closely and carefully, as are some bloggers I know. Upon reading the […]

Posted in Breast Cancer, cancer treatment, Medical News, Oncology (cancer)Tagged , , , , , , , , , , 1 Comment on Learning From the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium, At a Distance

The BC Sisterhood Takes on Sex After Cancer and What Oncologists Don’t Say

A hit in the women’s breast cancer Twitter league came my way from the Breast Cancer Sisterhood®. Brenda Coffee, a survivor and founder of the Survivorship Media Network, offers a serious post on What Your Oncologist Doesn’t Tell You About Sex. There’s a music video, Don’t Touch Me that’s annoying but depressingly right on how […]

Posted in Blogs, Breast Cancer, cancer survival, Oncology (cancer), Video, Wednesday Web Sighting, Women's HealthTagged , , , , , , Leave a Comment on The BC Sisterhood Takes on Sex After Cancer and What Oncologists Don’t Say
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