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Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Elements of Spring: Color in the Blog World

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota
Pink.jpg

Color looms large in March, and with the beginning of spring, the season of budding hues, came rich images and stories on the blogosphere. The colors of note were certainly hot: Neon seemed to be having a moment in the world of interiors. From the scorching pinks highlighted by the The Style Files, to the electric accents in kitchens we spotlighted on Remodelista, bold hues were married with more classic environments. It seems black and white were taking a back seat in the fashion world as well, as Refinery29 reported on ways to mix florescent into one's wardrobe and we noted siren red on the legs of the "color courageous." Indeed, color prevails in the art world. The Daily Imprint highlighted the emerging Australian artist James Ettelson, who incorporates rich pigments into his work in a style that "combines traditional Aboriginal painting techniques with pop art." Moco Loco paid homage to the textual compositions by Swedish artist Matthias Van Arkel, describing one of his turquoise pieces of dyed platinum and silicon rubber to be so vibrant that it "begs to be touched." It seemed the images of Italian photographer Helenio Barbetta had a similar positive effect on viewers, as Desire to Inspire wrote that his shots of interiors and exteriors highlight "everything demanding attention."

While various voices in the design, style and art worlds blogged about their true colors, the gastronomical side of the web was also bursting with hue inspiration. On the cusp of the spring produce bounty, food bloggers were creative with what was still in season: After a trip to Morocco, Heidi Swanson created a recipe for bright yellow Ginger Grapefruit Curd for her blog 101 Cookbooks, while the Smitten Kitten incorporated root vegetables into breakfast for Carrot Cake Pancakes. For the adventurous epicurean looking for an eclectic ambience, Remodelista highlighted a zeitgeist café and an i-Hop-turned-hip-Korean-Fusion restaurant--two dining spots that work color into their décor in unique and adventurous ways.

Guest post from the editors at Remodelista, the sourcebook for the considered home.

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View the original article here

Dermatology Art Contest of Mayo Clinic shows that art can be seen in every aspect of life

A Mayo Clinic Dermatology art shows beauty really is skin deep. From the Mayo Clinic News blog:

A hair follicle or a copy of the skin that doesn't look like much of anything with the naked eye can become a complex artwork, colored with a microscope. The winner of the first contest of art of dermatologists of Mayo in 2011 is "the hair follicle Triplet". Alexander Meves, M.D., used fluorescent dyes to highlight proteins. Winners of the inaugural art appeared in the may issue of the journal of cutaneous pathology.


"Every single day, dermatopathologists get to see beautiful pictures under a microscope, and most people never have the opportunity to see that. So I thought it would be a nice way to show not only the science of dermatopathology, but also art, "says the creator of the contest, Dr. Lehman, a Mayo Clinic dermatopathologist.


Dr. Lehman hopes medical society will run with the idea and keep similar contests to highlight aesthetics in their specialty. People in other lines of work can also celebrate the beauty of what they do every day, she says.


Editor's Note: Allergists should do something similar. We have beautiful pollen allergens highlight on the covers of the magazine monthly ACAAI.


Dr. Lehman, "Art can be seen in every aspect of life," he says. "Enough to have an open mind and be trying."


References


Dermatology Art shows beauty really is skin deep. Mayo Clinic news.


 

Dermatology Art Contest of Mayo Clinic shows that art can be seen in every aspect of life

A Mayo Clinic Dermatology art shows beauty really is skin deep. From the Mayo Clinic News blog:

A hair follicle or a copy of the skin that doesn't look like much of anything with the naked eye can become a complex artwork, colored with a microscope. The winner of the first contest of art of dermatologists of Mayo in 2011 is "the hair follicle Triplet". Alexander Meves, M.D., used fluorescent dyes to highlight proteins. Winners of the inaugural art appeared in the may issue of the journal of cutaneous pathology.


"Every single day, dermatopathologists get to see beautiful pictures under a microscope, and most people never have the opportunity to see that. So I thought it would be a nice way to show not only the science of dermatopathology, but also art, "says the creator of the contest, Dr. Lehman, a Mayo Clinic dermatopathologist.


Dr. Lehman hopes medical society will run with the idea and keep similar contests to highlight aesthetics in their specialty. People in other lines of work can also celebrate the beauty of what they do every day, she says.


Editor's Note: Allergists should do something similar. We have beautiful pollen allergens highlight on the covers of the magazine monthly ACAAI.


Dr. Lehman, "Art can be seen in every aspect of life," he says. "Enough to have an open mind and be trying."


References


Dermatology Art shows beauty really is skin deep. Mayo Clinic news.


 

Dermatology Art Contest of Mayo Clinic shows that art can be seen in every aspect of life

A Mayo Clinic Dermatology art shows beauty really is skin deep. From the Mayo Clinic News blog:

A hair follicle or a copy of the skin that doesn't look like much of anything with the naked eye can become a complex artwork, colored with a microscope. The winner of the first contest of art of dermatologists of Mayo in 2011 is "the hair follicle Triplet". Alexander Meves, M.D., used fluorescent dyes to highlight proteins. Winners of the inaugural art appeared in the may issue of the journal of cutaneous pathology.


"Every single day, dermatopathologists get to see beautiful pictures under a microscope, and most people never have the opportunity to see that. So I thought it would be a nice way to show not only the science of dermatopathology, but also art, "says the creator of the contest, Dr. Lehman, a Mayo Clinic dermatopathologist.


Dr. Lehman hopes medical society will run with the idea and keep similar contests to highlight aesthetics in their specialty. People in other lines of work can also celebrate the beauty of what they do every day, she says.


Editor's Note: Allergists should do something similar. We have beautiful pollen allergens highlight on the covers of the magazine monthly ACAAI.


Dr. Lehman, "Art can be seen in every aspect of life," he says. "Enough to have an open mind and be trying."


References


Dermatology Art shows beauty really is skin deep. Mayo Clinic news.


 

Best in blogs: Mashable Sale Rumor, Goldman Sachs Exposed, Homeless Hotspots, and the Most Viral Video of All Time

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota
Chart.jpg

So that "Kony 2012" video this week became the most viral video in history, hitting 100 million views in six days, Mashable says. Compared to how long it took other famous Web videos to reach that many views, Kony 2012 makes the "Laughing Baby" just look sad. There's nothing laughable about Joseph Kony, of course, Uganda's longtime horrific warlord whose violent LRA group had kidnapped kids and forced them into child soldiery. Hard to imagine there would be backlash against spreading the word on that, but hang on. Says Slate: "Some critics say that the film glossed over the context of the conflict and unfairly focuses on the LRA, while other groups in the region have used similarly atrocious tactics. Others, meanwhile, have criticized the nonprofit for spending only 30 percent of its proceeds to help Uganda's children." The Nation suggested the viral craze was getting ridiculous: "If you are looking for the precise moment when the viral campaign against Ugandan rebel Joseph Kony turned to farce, it was probably at 6:21 pm on Friday March 9. 'Have you heard of this guy Joseph Kony?,' asked the rapper-turned-reality-star Vanilla Ice, in a tweet from Dallas. 'America needs to send in the hero's that killed Bin Laden and take this killer out.'" Well, if you reach 100 million people, some won't be Winston Churchill.

Kony.png

The Nation says the video "perfectly demonstrates the urgent, uplifting arc of successful web campaigns....[But] the film's largest substantive shortcoming is because of the timing. Kony was already indicted on war crimes in 2005; he already fled Uganda." Wow, the Web works fast.

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Another "Internet sensation" this week was the scathing "Why I Am Leaving Goldman Sachs" letter by now-former Goldman exec Greg Smith, printed prominently in the NY Times. "The Internet has been positively ablaze with chatter, much of it humorous," blogs Bottom Line. The Daily Mash responded with a resignation letter from Darth Vader, mimicking the original: "TODAY is my last day at the Empire. After almost 12 years, first as a summer intern, then in the Death Star and now in London, I believe I have worked here long enough to understand the trajectory of its culture, its people and its massive, genocidal space machines." Borowtiz Report did a phony letter from Goldman's CEO reassuring clients: "At Goldman, we pride ourselves on our ability to scour the world's universities and business schools for the finest sociopaths money will buy."

homeless_hotspots_300x300.jpg

Of course, the South by Southwest fandango, that multi-tentacled squid of a music/tech/film festival, is happening now. A dumb marketing campaign has become the breakout news from Austin. ReadWriteWeb reports: "South By Southwest 2012 can be summarized thusly: An impossibly-named marketing company called Bartle Bogle Hegarty is doing a little human science experiment called Homeless Hotspots. It gives out 4G hotspots to homeless people along with a promotional t-shirt. The shirt doesn't say, 'I have a 4G hotspot.' It says, 'I am a 4G hotspot.'" Epicenter says "This is my worry: the homeless turned not just into walking, talking hotspots, but walking, talking billboards for a program that doesn't care anything at all about them or their future, so long as it can score a point or two about digital disruption of old media paradigms. So long as it can prove that the real problem with homelessness is that it doesn't provide a service." Yes, shocking, a marketing gimmick has turned out to be cynical. The other big news out of SXSW also has nothing to do with the hundreds of musicians, companies, artworks and gadgets on display down there but a rumor that CNN may buy Mashable for $200 million. Retuers columnist Felix Salmon broke the rumor, but there hasn't been confirmation or much solid reporting . "Not so fast," says PaidContent. "There are moments when deals can look very close--and when they might not be as close as they seem."

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There was some music news from Austin. Smashing Pumpkins frontman Billy Corgan talked about the Internet's ongoing destruction of the industry, Social Media Today says. Corgan stated: "Our aim is to turn the 'social' into a new way to experience an album. By taking the medium one step further we will create an experience with Oceania online and off-line that transcends the single and the single mentality in all ways." Get ready for... group earbuds? Also, Apple made a big splash at SXSW, but it was Fiona Apple, resurfacing after years away from the spotlight. Says Idolator: "It may not have been the home-run performance fans might've hoped for from Apple's first performance outside of Los Angeles in roughly five years. But it was enough to prove that Apple remains a fierce and fascinating pop singer."

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And another era comes to a close as the people at Encyclopedia Britannica have announced "we will discontinue the 32-volume printed edition...when our current inventory is gone." It's sad, but just a sign of the times, says The Daily What: "Over the last decade, Encyclopaedia Britannica has seen online rival Wikipedia slowly eat away at its market share, with its high-minded notions of free information for all by all. By comparison, a complete set of Encyclopaedia Britannica books will set you back a cool $1,395." Says The Next Web: "I'm not quite sure what has taken the company so long to realize that it was losing money by continuing to print books, but either way, the time has come to say goodbye." Old hardcover encyclopedia sets can be donated directly to Vanilla Ice.

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View the original article here

Children's ability to "roam" was destroyed, and they gather on social media sites

From The NYTimes:

Danah Boyd, a senior researcher at Microsoft and an Assistant Professor at New York University: "children's ability to roam is basically been destroyed. Leaving the child out to bike around the neighborhood is seen as terrific now, although by all measures, life is safer for children today. "


Children are of course on social media sites for relatively unattended conversations, flirt, immature humor and social exchanges that are a normal teenager stuff hang-out, he said.


In addition, the great panic behavior on-line teenager distracts from potential benefits.


Let children be children-the unstructured play time can be more important than homework, suggests a child psychologist. "Children have lost 8 hours per week of free play, unstructured and spontaneous in the last 2 decades because of homework. Reduction of unstructured play time is partly responsible for slowing cognitive and emotional development of children. 5 Years now had the ability to self-regulation of a 3-year-old in the 1940s; the critical factor seems to be discipline, but he hasn't been playing. "


Video: A life cycle in 90 seconds:


References:


Cracking teen codes online. NYTimes, 2012.


Image source: OpenClipArt.org, in the public domain.


 

Children's ability to "roam" was destroyed, and they gather on social media sites

From The NYTimes:

Danah Boyd, a senior researcher at Microsoft and an Assistant Professor at New York University: "children's ability to roam is basically been destroyed. Leaving the child out to bike around the neighborhood is seen as terrific now, although by all measures, life is safer for children today. "


Children are of course on social media sites for relatively unattended conversations, flirt, immature humor and social exchanges that are a normal teenager stuff hang-out, he said.


In addition, the great panic behavior on-line teenager distracts from potential benefits.


Let children be children-the unstructured play time can be more important than homework, suggests a child psychologist. "Children have lost 8 hours per week of free play, unstructured and spontaneous in the last 2 decades because of homework. Reduction of unstructured play time is partly responsible for slowing cognitive and emotional development of children. 5 Years now had the ability to self-regulation of a 3-year-old in the 1940s; the critical factor seems to be discipline, but he hasn't been playing. "


Video: A life cycle in 90 seconds:


References:


Cracking teen codes online. NYTimes, 2012.


Image source: OpenClipArt.org, in the public domain.


 

Children's ability to "roam" was destroyed, and they gather on social media sites

From The NYTimes:

Danah Boyd, a senior researcher at Microsoft and an Assistant Professor at New York University: "children's ability to roam is basically been destroyed. Leaving the child out to bike around the neighborhood is seen as terrific now, although by all measures, life is safer for children today. "


Children are of course on social media sites for relatively unattended conversations, flirt, immature humor and social exchanges that are a normal teenager stuff hang-out, he said.


In addition, the great panic behavior on-line teenager distracts from potential benefits.


Let children be children-the unstructured play time can be more important than homework, suggests a child psychologist. "Children have lost 8 hours per week of free play, unstructured and spontaneous in the last 2 decades because of homework. Reduction of unstructured play time is partly responsible for slowing cognitive and emotional development of children. 5 Years now had the ability to self-regulation of a 3-year-old in the 1940s; the critical factor seems to be discipline, but he hasn't been playing. "


Video: A life cycle in 90 seconds:


References:


Cracking teen codes online. NYTimes, 2012.


Image source: OpenClipArt.org, in the public domain.


 

Why was san gabriels location chosen?

Why were the location chosen for mission san antonio de pauda? Generally speaking, American Indians living at missions were forced to rid themselves of their native clothing, hair styles, language, customs and religion for that of the missionaries.


View the original article here

Infidelity in men may be associated with higher risk of cardiovascular events

The authors of this study from Italy performed an extensive Medline search for "infidelity," "extramarital", "infidelity" and "men".

Infidelity in men is how common?

As expected, the results were variable. Some surveys reported that 1.5-4% of married men had extramarital coitus in any given year, 23.2% of other men who have cheated during their current relationship.

Lifetime prevalence of infidelity was between 15% and 50%.

What are the factors related to infidelity?

Men with more extramarital affairs have often a dysfunctional primary relationship.

Authorship and conflict within the family are associated with a higher risk of having an affair.

Unfaithful men display a higher testicular volume androgenization, increased sexual desire and sexual functioning better.

What are the clinical implications of infidelity in men?

Some studies have suggested that having an affair could have a negative impact on cardiac morbidity and mortality. Infidelity in men seems to be associated with a higher risk of cardiovascular events.

References

Fisher to Bandini and Rakes G, G, M Crown, Monami and Mannucci and Sexual m. Maggi and cardiovascular correlates of male infidelity. J sex Med, 2012.

Image source: OpenClipart.org, in the public domain.


View the original article here

Infidelity in men may be associated with higher risk of cardiovascular events

The authors of this study from Italy performed an extensive Medline search for "infidelity," "extramarital", "infidelity" and "men".

Infidelity in men is how common?

As expected, the results were variable. Some surveys reported that 1.5-4% of married men had extramarital coitus in any given year, 23.2% of other men who have cheated during their current relationship.

Lifetime prevalence of infidelity was between 15% and 50%.

What are the factors related to infidelity?

Men with more extramarital affairs have often a dysfunctional primary relationship.

Authorship and conflict within the family are associated with a higher risk of having an affair.

Unfaithful men display a higher testicular volume androgenization, increased sexual desire and sexual functioning better.

What are the clinical implications of infidelity in men?

Some studies have suggested that having an affair could have a negative impact on cardiac morbidity and mortality. Infidelity in men seems to be associated with a higher risk of cardiovascular events.

References

Fisher to Bandini and Rakes G, G, M Crown, Monami and Mannucci and Sexual m. Maggi and cardiovascular correlates of male infidelity. J sex Med, 2012.

Image source: OpenClipart.org, in the public domain.


View the original article here

Infidelity in men may be associated with higher risk of cardiovascular events

The authors of this study from Italy performed an extensive Medline search for "infidelity," "extramarital", "infidelity" and "men".

Infidelity in men is how common?

As expected, the results were variable. Some surveys reported that 1.5-4% of married men had extramarital coitus in any given year, 23.2% of other men who have cheated during their current relationship.

Lifetime prevalence of infidelity was between 15% and 50%.

What are the factors related to infidelity?

Men with more extramarital affairs have often a dysfunctional primary relationship.

Authorship and conflict within the family are associated with a higher risk of having an affair.

Unfaithful men display a higher testicular volume androgenization, increased sexual desire and sexual functioning better.

What are the clinical implications of infidelity in men?

Some studies have suggested that having an affair could have a negative impact on cardiac morbidity and mortality. Infidelity in men seems to be associated with a higher risk of cardiovascular events.

References

Fisher to Bandini and Rakes G, G, M Crown, Monami and Mannucci and Sexual m. Maggi and cardiovascular correlates of male infidelity. J sex Med, 2012.

Image source: OpenClipart.org, in the public domain.


View the original article here

What is marylands main river?

What are the names of the two main rivers in Maryland? Hamburgers, hotdogs, and chips. Hamburgers and hotdogs,


View the original article here

Health care social media-more articles

Here are my suggestions for some of the major items relating to social media health in the past 2 weeks:

Medical and social media: http://goo.gl/pIrgh "How to stop worrying and learn to Love the Internet"

Consumer expectations for Healthcare Social Media http://goo.gl/REXqV

Because all hospitals need Twitter accounts: Google ranking of a URL associated with the number of Tweets about this URL http://goo.gl/AYf9t

Interviewed deleted as candidate, because the your Klout score was too low (34), "Have hired a guy whose score was 67". Even if you don't have any idea what the Klout score is, there is a chance that it already is affecting your life. People with formidable Klout will start aboard planes, get free access to VIP lounges airport, stay in hotel rooms better and receive deep discounts retail stores. A two-week vacation social media might cause your Klout score for a dive. http://goo.gl/ABu2S

13 things you never knew you could do on LinkedIn http://goo.gl/mh4da

100 ways to use Twitter In education, the degree of difficulty http://goo.gl/lAs5v

Pack the right gadgets for the road-NYTimes http://goo.gl/SmQgA

A http://goo.gl/kpvJT Review of Living Language and Rocket languages-App Smart-NYTimes

10 Http://goo.gl/24FpW HTML Tags all new bloggers should learn

Is this the future of Khan Academy? http://goo.gl/xtErX-biology Bozeman on YouTube http://goo.gl/GUry5

Many consumers worldwide worry that the technology is overtaking their lives http://goo.gl/cJj5e

Articles were selected from my streams of Twitter and Google Reader.

Comment by Twitter:

Heidi Allen @ dreamingspires: social media health-worth reading-Klout and Google rankings tied to tweets.


View the original article here

Health care social media-more articles

Here are my suggestions for some of the major items relating to social media health in the past 2 weeks:

Medical and social media: http://goo.gl/pIrgh "How to stop worrying and learn to Love the Internet"

Consumer expectations for Healthcare Social Media http://goo.gl/REXqV

Because all hospitals need Twitter accounts: Google ranking of a URL associated with the number of Tweets about this URL http://goo.gl/AYf9t

Interviewed deleted as candidate, because the your Klout score was too low (34), "Have hired a guy whose score was 67". Even if you don't have any idea what the Klout score is, there is a chance that it already is affecting your life. People with formidable Klout will start aboard planes, get free access to VIP lounges airport, stay in hotel rooms better and receive deep discounts retail stores. A two-week vacation social media might cause your Klout score for a dive. http://goo.gl/ABu2S

13 things you never knew you could do on LinkedIn http://goo.gl/mh4da

100 ways to use Twitter In education, the degree of difficulty http://goo.gl/lAs5v

Pack the right gadgets for the road-NYTimes http://goo.gl/SmQgA

A http://goo.gl/kpvJT Review of Living Language and Rocket languages-App Smart-NYTimes

10 Http://goo.gl/24FpW HTML Tags all new bloggers should learn

Is this the future of Khan Academy? http://goo.gl/xtErX-biology Bozeman on YouTube http://goo.gl/GUry5

Many consumers worldwide worry that the technology is overtaking their lives http://goo.gl/cJj5e

Articles were selected from my streams of Twitter and Google Reader.

Comment by Twitter:

Heidi Allen @ dreamingspires: social media health-worth reading-Klout and Google rankings tied to tweets.


View the original article here

Health care social media-more articles

Here are my suggestions for some of the major items relating to social media health in the past 2 weeks:

Medical and social media: http://goo.gl/pIrgh "How to stop worrying and learn to Love the Internet"

Consumer expectations for Healthcare Social Media http://goo.gl/REXqV

Because all hospitals need Twitter accounts: Google ranking of a URL associated with the number of Tweets about this URL http://goo.gl/AYf9t

Interviewed deleted as candidate, because the your Klout score was too low (34), "Have hired a guy whose score was 67". Even if you don't have any idea what the Klout score is, there is a chance that it already is affecting your life. People with formidable Klout will start aboard planes, get free access to VIP lounges airport, stay in hotel rooms better and receive deep discounts retail stores. A two-week vacation social media might cause your Klout score for a dive. http://goo.gl/ABu2S

13 things you never knew you could do on LinkedIn http://goo.gl/mh4da

100 ways to use Twitter In education, the degree of difficulty http://goo.gl/lAs5v

Pack the right gadgets for the road-NYTimes http://goo.gl/SmQgA

A http://goo.gl/kpvJT Review of Living Language and Rocket languages-App Smart-NYTimes

10 Http://goo.gl/24FpW HTML Tags all new bloggers should learn

Is this the future of Khan Academy? http://goo.gl/xtErX-biology Bozeman on YouTube http://goo.gl/GUry5

Many consumers worldwide worry that the technology is overtaking their lives http://goo.gl/cJj5e

Articles were selected from my streams of Twitter and Google Reader.

Comment by Twitter:

Heidi Allen @ dreamingspires: social media health-worth reading-Klout and Google rankings tied to tweets.


View the original article here

What two significant changes have occurred in Alice springs within the last 10 years and what factors have caused them?

Is two a factor of 10? Yes, two (2) is a factor of ten (10). In reverse, ten is a multiple of 2.

Sorry, I could not read the content fromt this page.

View the original article here

Best medical-review blog, blog carnival week

What happened to Carnival medblog "Grand Rounds"?

It is sad to see that the disappearance of the Carnival medblog "Grand rounds". The weekly summary of the best medical blog post was published from 2004, with only a few breaks. There have been issues for more than a month, and no new ones are planned. A new initiative from Health Care SoMedia review could replace some of them http://goo.gl/73RpE


This post is a part of a project to recreate a weekly review, or the best medical blog carnival blog posts. Feel free to send your suggestions to my email at clinicalcases@gmail.com. "Best of Medical Blogs-weekly review, blog carnival" will be released on Tuesday, just as the old Grand rounds. The organizers of blog carnival Grand Rounds. @ NickGenes, and @ DrVal are aware of this project.


As physicians to manage Social Media profiles


Personal vs. Professional: how doctors handle Their Social Media profiles is a blog post by Matt Wood of http://goo.gl/JNyu1 blog of medicine from the University of Chicago. Matt has posted a series of great blog post recently about using social media. Doctors at the University of Chicago are clearly the leader in using social media in a city with a rich history of great medical centers as medicine UChicago, Northwestern, Childrens ' Memorial, Rush, Loyola and Northshore. Matt tries to discover what makes the UChicago doctors more comfortable using social media that their peers at other institutions: http://goo.gl/JNyu1


Consumers use social media for medical decisions


Consumer expectations for Social Media Healthcare – this is a brief summary by Ed Bennett, "a maker of lists" of using the oragnizations healtchare social media http://goo.gl/REXqV


Digital strategies for health care organizations-a good overview from the Australian http://goo.gl/PZtWl blog IV line


Salaries of doctors


Dr. Mandrola quotes a colleague experienced salaries of doctors: "we are all happy with what we do. What upsets us most is seeing what others are doing. " Since then, I try not to dwell on what others do. http://goo.gl/WBnJq


Health care social media is a "moral obligation" for physicians


Health care social media is a moral obligation, says Farris Timimi, M.D., Medical Director for the Mayo Clinic Center for Social Media, quoted by "Fierce health IT". Social media must be grown and nurtured for patients. "Our patients are there. Our moral obligation is to meet them where they are and give them the information they need so they can try to recover, "said Dr. Timimi. "You have to be ready for this. Builds for patients; not for themselves. "This is not marketing," he added. "This is the right thing to do" http://goo.gl/BHzKf


Social media is no longer a moral obligation for physicians rather than appear on TV and radio shows and write newspaper columns. It's nice if you have the time and the ability to do so, but the most important things is to focus on what matters most — providing the correct diagnosis and the best treatment possible for your patients.


Comment by Twitter:


Westby Fisher, MD @ doctorwes: Best of Medical Blogs-blog carnival week, RIP bit.ly/KsBSLJ


Laika (Jacqueline) @ laikas: after the demise of Grand Rounds @ DrVes begins its weekly blog review bit.ly/Iqgcmx Gr8 initiative; but still missing the old GR


WB Medical Education @ WBmeded: hope to control some of these last, looks interesting RT @ DrVes: Best of Blogs: weekly medical blog carnival, goo.gl/fb/d870P


Mike Cadogan @ sandnsurf: another great way to control your information overload with the Best of Blogs-weekly medical review bit.ly/K1stxo


 

Best medical-review blog, blog carnival week

What happened to Carnival medblog "Grand Rounds"?

It is sad to see that the disappearance of the Carnival medblog "Grand rounds". The weekly summary of the best medical blog post was published from 2004, with only a few breaks. There have been issues for more than a month, and no new ones are planned. A new initiative from Health Care SoMedia review could replace some of them http://goo.gl/73RpE


This post is a part of a project to recreate a weekly review, or the best medical blog carnival blog posts. Feel free to send your suggestions to my email at clinicalcases@gmail.com. "Best of Medical Blogs-weekly review, blog carnival" will be released on Tuesday, just as the old Grand rounds. The organizers of blog carnival Grand Rounds. @ NickGenes, and @ DrVal are aware of this project.


As physicians to manage Social Media profiles


Personal vs. Professional: how doctors handle Their Social Media profiles is a blog post by Matt Wood of http://goo.gl/JNyu1 blog of medicine from the University of Chicago. Matt has posted a series of great blog post recently about using social media. Doctors at the University of Chicago are clearly the leader in using social media in a city with a rich history of great medical centers as medicine UChicago, Northwestern, Childrens ' Memorial, Rush, Loyola and Northshore. Matt tries to discover what makes the UChicago doctors more comfortable using social media that their peers at other institutions: http://goo.gl/JNyu1


Consumers use social media for medical decisions


Consumer expectations for Social Media Healthcare – this is a brief summary by Ed Bennett, "a maker of lists" of using the oragnizations healtchare social media http://goo.gl/REXqV


Digital strategies for health care organizations-a good overview from the Australian http://goo.gl/PZtWl blog IV line


Salaries of doctors


Dr. Mandrola quotes a colleague experienced salaries of doctors: "we are all happy with what we do. What upsets us most is seeing what others are doing. " Since then, I try not to dwell on what others do. http://goo.gl/WBnJq


Health care social media is a "moral obligation" for physicians


Health care social media is a moral obligation, says Farris Timimi, M.D., Medical Director for the Mayo Clinic Center for Social Media, quoted by "Fierce health IT". Social media must be grown and nurtured for patients. "Our patients are there. Our moral obligation is to meet them where they are and give them the information they need so they can try to recover, "said Dr. Timimi. "You have to be ready for this. Builds for patients; not for themselves. "This is not marketing," he added. "This is the right thing to do" http://goo.gl/BHzKf


Social media is no longer a moral obligation for physicians rather than appear on TV and radio shows and write newspaper columns. It's nice if you have the time and the ability to do so, but the most important things is to focus on what matters most — providing the correct diagnosis and the best treatment possible for your patients.


Comment by Twitter:


Westby Fisher, MD @ doctorwes: Best of Medical Blogs-blog carnival week, RIP bit.ly/KsBSLJ


Laika (Jacqueline) @ laikas: after the demise of Grand Rounds @ DrVes begins its weekly blog review bit.ly/Iqgcmx Gr8 initiative; but still missing the old GR


WB Medical Education @ WBmeded: hope to control some of these last, looks interesting RT @ DrVes: Best of Blogs: weekly medical blog carnival, goo.gl/fb/d870P


Mike Cadogan @ sandnsurf: another great way to control your information overload with the Best of Blogs-weekly medical review bit.ly/K1stxo


 

Best medical-review blog, blog carnival week

What happened to Carnival medblog "Grand Rounds"?

It is sad to see that the disappearance of the Carnival medblog "Grand rounds". The weekly summary of the best medical blog post was published from 2004, with only a few breaks. There have been issues for more than a month, and no new ones are planned. A new initiative from Health Care SoMedia review could replace some of them http://goo.gl/73RpE


This post is a part of a project to recreate a weekly review, or the best medical blog carnival blog posts. Feel free to send your suggestions to my email at clinicalcases@gmail.com. "Best of Medical Blogs-weekly review, blog carnival" will be released on Tuesday, just as the old Grand rounds. The organizers of blog carnival Grand Rounds. @ NickGenes, and @ DrVal are aware of this project.


As physicians to manage Social Media profiles


Personal vs. Professional: how doctors handle Their Social Media profiles is a blog post by Matt Wood of http://goo.gl/JNyu1 blog of medicine from the University of Chicago. Matt has posted a series of great blog post recently about using social media. Doctors at the University of Chicago are clearly the leader in using social media in a city with a rich history of great medical centers as medicine UChicago, Northwestern, Childrens ' Memorial, Rush, Loyola and Northshore. Matt tries to discover what makes the UChicago doctors more comfortable using social media that their peers at other institutions: http://goo.gl/JNyu1


Consumers use social media for medical decisions


Consumer expectations for Social Media Healthcare – this is a brief summary by Ed Bennett, "a maker of lists" of using the oragnizations healtchare social media http://goo.gl/REXqV


Digital strategies for health care organizations-a good overview from the Australian http://goo.gl/PZtWl blog IV line


Salaries of doctors


Dr. Mandrola quotes a colleague experienced salaries of doctors: "we are all happy with what we do. What upsets us most is seeing what others are doing. " Since then, I try not to dwell on what others do. http://goo.gl/WBnJq


Health care social media is a "moral obligation" for physicians


Health care social media is a moral obligation, says Farris Timimi, M.D., Medical Director for the Mayo Clinic Center for Social Media, quoted by "Fierce health IT". Social media must be grown and nurtured for patients. "Our patients are there. Our moral obligation is to meet them where they are and give them the information they need so they can try to recover, "said Dr. Timimi. "You have to be ready for this. Builds for patients; not for themselves. "This is not marketing," he added. "This is the right thing to do" http://goo.gl/BHzKf


Social media is no longer a moral obligation for physicians rather than appear on TV and radio shows and write newspaper columns. It's nice if you have the time and the ability to do so, but the most important things is to focus on what matters most — providing the correct diagnosis and the best treatment possible for your patients.


Comment by Twitter:


Westby Fisher, MD @ doctorwes: Best of Medical Blogs-blog carnival week, RIP bit.ly/KsBSLJ


Laika (Jacqueline) @ laikas: after the demise of Grand Rounds @ DrVes begins its weekly blog review bit.ly/Iqgcmx Gr8 initiative; but still missing the old GR


WB Medical Education @ WBmeded: hope to control some of these last, looks interesting RT @ DrVes: Best of Blogs: weekly medical blog carnival, goo.gl/fb/d870P


Mike Cadogan @ sandnsurf: another great way to control your information overload with the Best of Blogs-weekly medical review bit.ly/K1stxo


 

Which Avenue did harry take a walk on?

How long does it take to walk 5k? If you walk it, it takes about 50-60 minutes. If you jog it, it takes about 40-45 minutes. If you run it, it can take from 20-35 minutes.


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