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  • SHOW TUNES 1, FUNDAMENTALISTS 0

    From a few sources, but I just had to share this for my friends who might not have seen it yet. Behold, the power of show tunes:

    This morning I had the most bizarre subway ride. I board the Number 3 train at Grand Army Plaza after 9 a.m. Find a seat, then settle into reading Henry James for class. I hear a woman’s voice gradually rising in volume. She is preaching the “Lord’s” word to the train car’s sleepy riders. Of course, I had forgotten the headphones for my subway evil sounds blocking device. The train stops and starts.
    The words denigrating “gay devils” reach my ears. I stand up.

    Me: “Excuse me, but do you mind keeping your voice down, I am trying to read.”

    Preacher Lady: (screams) “I got to testify.”

    Preacher lady hitches up her skirts and tells me that I am going to hell for interrupting you-know-who’s word. Two or three OTHER Christian ladies on the train start shouting at me and discussing my prospects as the Devil’s prison bitch. The last straw was a 50 something red faced man in a suit slamming his Bible towards my face.
    There was only one thing I could do.

    Me: “If you all don’t lower your voices and cease calling me Satan, I will have to sing show tunes.”

    The other straphangers look at me with stony faces.
    I begin to sing.
    “Its very clear, our love is here to stay. Not for a year, but forever and a day…” [read on…] [Livejournal: Koaloha]

  • Medbloggers

    Jon Udell has a great post on Medbloggers, something that I didn’t really realize existed until he wrote about it. Though we’ve got political bloggers, library bloggers, law bloggers, so it makes sense there would be medical bloggers.

    Medbloggers

    The numbers are small. Starting with Pho’s blogroll, I began assembling a list of the medical bloggers who cross-reference one another. What I found confirmed Pho’s estimate that there are no more than 100 of these medbloggers, many of whom are aggregated at medlogs.com. Nor are these medblogs yet widely subscribed. Pho today has 14 Bloglines subscribers. One of the founders of the movement, medpundit, today has 58. Those numbers are one or two orders of magnitude shy of the readerships of many of the tech blogs I follow. But unless fear of malpractice strangles this baby in the cradle, that will be a temporary phenomenon. In the long run there will be many more people hungry for informed analysis of medical issues than for informed analysis of tech issues.

    This looks like a great opportunity to watch the blogging meme replicate throughout another community of practice. I’ll be fascinated to see how it changes, but also is changed by, that community. Corporate techbloggers, for example, are learning to walk a fine line between acceptable sharing of information and punishable transgression. Medbloggers face a different set of issues: libel, privacy, and of course malpractice. See this American Medical News article for a useful overview. [Jon Udell’s Weblog]

    As you can tell from some recent posts I’ve started following medical information on Pulmonary Fibrosis online, mostly inspired by this article. I even found a blog called Bronch Blog to subscribe to.

  • The Need For Patient Education

    One thing that amazes me is how much information is available on medical conditions and how few people ever find it. Hopefully things like this can help with that.

    Coalition for Pulmonary Fibrosis Announces Publication of New Educational Tools for Patients

    Preliminary Results From Latest Research Initiative Demonstrate Need for Lung
    Transplant and Pulmonary Rehabilitation Education for IPF Patients and
    Caregivers

    SAN JOSE, Calif., Sept. 17 /PRNewswire/ — The Coalition for Pulmonary
    Fibrosis
    (CPF) announced today the publication of two new educational
    brochures: ‘Lung Transplantation: What Every Patient with Idiopathic
    Pulmonary Fibrosis Should Know’ and ‘Oxygen Management and Pulmonary
    Rehabilitation for the IPF Patient’.

    The two brochures were created for patients, family members and physicians
    alike based on preliminary results of the CPF’s Basic Research Questionnaire,
    an education initiative launched last year to better understand the impact of
    idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) on patients and families, and to help the
    foundation grasp the educational needs that arise for those fighting the
    disease.

    To date, the CPF has received more than 1,400 responses to this
    ground-breaking survey, and based on educational gaps identified by patients,
    discovered the need for improved education and awareness on two very important
    topics for IPF patients; lung transplantation and pulmonary rehabilitation.

    Interim results of the CPF’s research questionnaire found that among
    current patients, 30 percent responded that their physician has not discussed,
    or even mentioned the topic of lung transplantation, a potential treatment
    option for IPF patients under 65. Of those patients under the age of 60,
    fewer than half (47 percent) said they have been advised to seek a lung
    transplant. Additional data from a Duke University study also indicates that
    more than 50 percent of those with IPF who are on transplant lists will pass
    away before a donor lung becomes available. [via Feedster Search: Pulmonary Fibrosis]

    This also makes me very thankful that I found the doctors I did as I went through my diagnosis. I was quickly forwarded to a pulmonary specialist and he was able to give me a preliminary diagnosis almost immediately. Once it was confirmed that I did actually have Pulmonary Fibrosis we sat down and talked about what it all means, what treatments were available, how things tended to progress, what it meant long term, the whole thing. I still find it kind of stunning that other people have not had this same experience.

  • Possible New Treatments for Pulmonary Fibrosis

    I’ve started hunting for news items to do with Pulmonary Fibrosis in my news reader, so will be making note of interesting developments that I find.

    Treatment for pulmonary fibrosis may be achieved by blocking cell death in the lung

    A research team at Yale has found that blocking a kind of cell death called apoptosis in fibrotic diseases of the lung, also blocks the fibrosis, opening new ways of looking at treatment for lung diseases such as pulmonary fibrosis. [via Feedster Search: Pulmonary Fibrosis]

  • How to Crash IE

    Eric Meyer posted a test file that tends to freeze IE6 and in some cases even cause a reboot of the computer. So if you’re running that, don’t click the link below.

    Freezer Case

    Since a few people asked for it, I’ve created a test file that reproduces the Internet Explorer freeze reported yesterday. You can find it with the title “Internet Explorer Freezes — BEWARE!“. …(254 words | CSS Browsers | comments and pings allowed) [via Thoughts From Eric]

    Behold, the power of CSS.

  • sine qua non

    For those of us who didn’t take Latin in school. Now you can slip these Common Latin Phrases into your daily speech to impress people. [via <lonita.links.log]

  • QOTD 09/18/2004

    Sir Richard Steele
    “Reading is to the mind what exercise is to the body.” [via Quotes of the Day]

  • Original Sin – INXS

    Cover of INXS - The Swing
    The other day I posted about the Apple Music Store and how I felt they were misrepresenting what they sell. While out shopping yesterday, I found a copy of the CD I wanted to buy, The Swing by INXS. So in honor of that, I’m posting the actual version of Original Sin (aac) from the CD (though other folks had also gotten it to me).

    I also happened to check back at iTMS to see if the listing was still incorrect, and it was. So here’s the question I have. How should Apple handle this kind of thing? Should they pull it from their site till it is fixed? Or just let people keep buying it? The first seems like the correct answer.

    I think the reason this is annoying me so much is that I had a similar issue with an audiobook I bought there. In the middle of the second file it suddenly jumped a bunch of chapters ahead, and in the third file, it jumped back. So it had obviously been encoded out of order. Yet when I called customer service on it, they just credited me back, and then didn’t change the version online, it was still available. It makes me wonder how much they really pay attention to problems.

    Anyway, enjoy the song.

  • QOTD 08/17/2004

    Hermann Hesse
    “When dealing with the insane, the best method is to pretend to be sane.” [via Quotes of the Day]

  • Ghost in the Shell: Innocence Clip

    ifilm.com has an 8 minute clip of Ghost in the Shell: Innocence. It looks quite amazing, I can’t wait to see this on the big screen.