Friday, July 31, 2009

Video of the Week: Jacqueline Novogratz on Escaping Poverty

Jacqueline Novogratz tells a moving story of an encounter in a Nairobi slum with Jane, a former prostitute, whose dreams of escaping poverty, of becoming a doctor and of getting married were fulfilled in an unexpected way.

One of the most innovative players shaping philanthropy today, Jacqueline Novogratz is redefining the way problems of poverty can be solved around the world. Drawing on her past experience in banking, microfinance and traditional philanthropy, Novogratz has become a leading proponent for financing entrepreneurs and enterprises that can bring affordable clean water, housing and healthcare to poor people so that they no longer have to depend on the disappointing results and lack of accountability seen in traditional charity and old-fashioned aid.The Acumen Fund, which she founded in 2001, has an ambitious plan: to create a blueprint for alleviating poverty using market-oriented approaches. Indeed, Acumen has more in common with a venture capital fund than a typical nonprofit. Rather than handing out grants, Acumen invests in fledgling companies and organizations that bring critical -- often life-altering -- products and services to the world’s poor. Like VCs, Acumen offers not just money, but also infrastructure and management expertise. From drip-irrigation systems in India to malaria-preventing bed nets in Tanzania to a low-cost mortgage program in Pakistan, Acumen’s portfolio offers important case studies for entrepreneurial efforts aimed at the vastly underserved market of those making less than $4/day.It’s a fascinating model that’s shaken up philanthropy and investment communities alike. Acumen Fund manages more than $20 million in investments aimed at serving the poor. And most of their projects deliver stunning, inspiring results. Their success can be traced back to Novogratz herself, who possesses that rarest combination of business savvy and cultural sensitivity. In addition to seeking out sound business models, she places great importance on identifying solutions from within communities rather than imposing them from the outside. “People don’t want handouts," Novogratz said at TEDGlobal 2005. "They want to make their own decisions, to solve their own problems.”In her new book, The Blue Sweater, she tells stories from the new philanthropy, which emphasizes sustainable bottom-up solutions over traditional top-down aid.

From TED.com

Health News of the Day, part 2

Health News of the Day is a daily summary made from the selected links I post on Twitter. It is in a bullet points format with links to the original sources which include 350 RSS feeds that produce about 2,500 items per day.

  • Eating omega-3-rich seafood may be a mood-lifter for women who are feeling depressed during pregnancy. Seafood may help depression in pregnancy - but pregnant women should limit consumption due to its mercury content... "Although common in western countries, depression is virtually absent in countries where people eat a lot of fish" http://bit.ly/jVrJA - Sounds like a bald statement...

  • Scientific Speed Reading: How to Read 300% Faster in 20 Minutes http://bit.ly/Z61jv - Not for me but the brave ones here may check it out.

  • CNN Medical Correspondent Elizabeth Cohen just started a blog at Blogger.com: Welcome to medical blogosphere! It looks like 140 characters on Twitter were not enough for @elizcohencnn - so here is the blog http://bit.ly/11sc4j

  • Pathtalk.org is a weblog about pathology http://pathtalk.org

  • Inspiring non-scientists: A Nature editorial reviews the TED Talks approach http://bit.ly/123EIx

  • Top 1,000 Hospital Web sites (worldwide) - http://bit.ly/15VkVQ , also Top US list: http://bit.ly/5YRC8 A huge data set.

Medical news tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source/links, etc. The inclusion of a Twitter update (tweet) does not represent endorsement or agreement of any kind. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support.

Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain

List of biomedical journals on Twitter

This is a list of biomedical journals on Twitter http://bit.ly/qM5wL - Just added NEJM, feel free to contribute. The list was started by @laikas, a medical librarian in the Netherlands and is open to edit.

It is fascinating to see how well Google Spreadsheets works as a structured wiki:



The spreadsheet was embedded by using Google Web Elements.

Social Media Related Tweets and Insights

From my Twitter account:

  • Unlogged-into Hotmail and Gmail account expire after 9 months and unlogged-into Yahoo accounts expire after 6 http://bit.ly/KzIGe

  • Google is trying to convince content owners that YouTube videos can make money after all: http://bit.ly/3Cjloz

  • See an example of using Google Books to illustrate a blog post: Decay-accelerating factor (DAF) http://bit.ly/19j1Q3

  • Health 1.0, Health 2.0, Health 3.0 http://bit.ly/uuITi

  • "View/Share PDFs with Google Docs. At some point in the near future, G Docs will allow you to upload any type of files" http://bit.ly/eLYtp

  • "Twitters redesign makes it look like a search engine, not a networking tool, but isn't that why we use it?" http://bit.ly/5wvZN" - No.

  • Q & A: Opting Out of Facebook Ads http://bit.ly/oGNBJ

  • HOW TO: Deal With Social Networking Overload http://bit.ly/Tx9Q9 - How-to guide number 1002 by Mashable :) - My advice: http://bit.ly/lT1TR

  • The top Mahalo.com page manager can expect to earn 21,616 Mahalo dollars per year (exchange rate of $0.75) http://bit.ly/feHAC

  • "Use Google Docs & Checkout to Sell Online: You can get your first online store up-and-running in under 5 minutes" http://bit.ly/wyRrE

Medical news tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source/links, etc. The inclusion of a Twitter update (tweet) does not represent endorsement or agreement of any kind. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support.

Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

Health News of the Day

Health News of the Day is a daily summary made from the selected links I post on Twitter. It is in a bullet points format with links to the original sources which include 350 RSS feeds that produce about 2,500 items per day.

  • Black Tea May Lower Blood Sugar, contains a polysaccharide that mimics type 2 diabetes drugs Precose and Glyset. Black tea polysaccharides inhibit an enzyme called alpha-glucosidase, which turns starch into glucose http://bit.ly/uAhvn - Warning: Do not stop your diabetes medications.

  • Immunity-suppressing drugs used in SLE can decrease the effects of flu vaccines, a Dutch study warns http://bit.ly/xLPbt

  • Plagiarism accusation hits stem-cell research: Editor retracts "sperm-creation paper" http://bit.ly/fBj33

  • Floppy iris syndrome: "semipermanent" drug effect of tamsulosin (Flomax)? http://bit.ly/18ltt0

  • Treating Patients as Partners, by Way of Informed Consent - NYT http://bit.ly/16SwYU

  • "How To Respond to an Angry Patient Complaint" by Susan Keane Baker http://bit.ly/AlY1D

  • Photos: A Careful Exam helps when looking for the cause of atrial fibrillation http://bit.ly/ft2Vt

  • Paco Addiction: Argentina's Ongoing Struggle http://bit.ly/l39pA

Medical news tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source/links, etc. The inclusion of a Twitter update (tweet) does not represent endorsement or agreement of any kind. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support.

Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Snapshot of Service in the Emerald City

All Department positions in Iraq (with the exception of the Ambassador and the DCM) are 1-year tours of duty and are unaccompanied. The Department has not permitted family members, with the exception of those spouses who qualified for approved eligible family member (EFM) jobs at the Embassy. Shared housing is cramped and privacy minimal. Recreational opportunities are limited. The work tempo is intense; in part because the embassy is in a war zone.

Source: GAO Report, US Embassy Iraq, 2009

Social Media Related Tweets and Insights

From my Twitter account:

  • MarketWatch: "A backlash against Twitter is building. "Twitter has no business model," Taplin said. "It's a fad. They come and go. My students don't care about Twitter at all" Taplin said "It's a time-waster for them. What they're using is Facebook. There isn't a single student in my large lecture hall who doesn't use Facebook. They like the clean interface." http://bit.ly/2bSS87

  • Top Fifty (50) Twitter Users in Medicine http://bit.ly/Ahvd3

  • NEJM is now on Twitter @NEJM and Facebook http://bit.ly/oPWwk

  • Airlines Follow Passengers Onto Social Media Sites http://bit.ly/pfUNN

  • 9 Tips for Having a Good Bad Day. http://bit.ly/vnSvE

  • Bing will become Google's main competitor in search, with a market share of 28% in the US and 11% worldwide http://bit.ly/kHjTU

  • Mobile broadband users face stiff penalties for exceeding their download limits http://bit.ly/7PDkH

  • "The First 10 Free Apps to Install on a New Windows PC" http://bit.ly/AFcMz

Medical news tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source/links, etc. The inclusion of a Twitter update (tweet) does not represent endorsement or agreement of any kind. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support.

Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

The Science of Extrapolating



The Science (or pseudoscience) of Extrapolating.

Image source: http://xkcd.com/605, Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 2.5 License.

Health News of the Day

Health News of the Day is a daily summary made from the selected links I post on Twitter. It is in a bullet points format with links to the original sources which include 350 RSS feeds that produce about 2,500 items per day.

  • Professor of bioethics in NYT: "Why We Must Ration Health Care" http://bit.ly/cYTSB

  • Noninvasive selective visualization of the whole peripheral nervous system by Whole-Body MRI Neurography http://bit.ly/pDTJk

  • 30-day rate of death after Roux-en-Y gastric bypass or laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding was 0.3% http://bit.ly/dbsN3

  • Gardner's syndrome (familial adenomatous polyposis) is a cilia-related disorder http://bit.ly/2laVS

  • Organic food has no nutritional or health benefits over ordinary food, according to a major study http://bit.ly/1AV0Pn

  • Protein Clumps May Appear in the Brain Years Before Memory Problems in Alzheimer's Dementia http://bit.ly/3Ztix

  • "Should you trust health advice from the web?" New Scientist http://bit.ly/5Pi43

  • NEJM is now on Twitter @NEJM and Facebook http://bit.ly/oPWwk

Medical news tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source/links, etc. The inclusion of a Twitter update (tweet) does not represent endorsement or agreement of any kind. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support.

Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

SFRC Clears 16 More Ambassador-Nominees

On July 28, 2009, the following nominations were reported out of committee by Senator Kerry of the Committee on Foreign Relations. These nominees are mostly for African posts (non-controversial and all that), so I expect that majority of these would get confirmation before the Senate breaks on August 7 for the summer.

Also, I have not heard of any Senator complained about human rights in Saudi Arabia so General James Smith’s nomination is probably safe from that Senate hold and jam that has currently snared NEA-boss designate, Jeffrey Feltman (for an entirely different reason). Um, don’t worry Senator Sam Brownback and 20 of his Senate friends are too busy working on banning mermaids and centaurs right now (S.1435, I kid you not!). Still, it might get a little tricky for the two WHA nominees (Honduras and ethanol issues if I remember right) … so we’ll be watching how this develops…

Arturo A. Valenzuela, of the District ofColumbia, to be an Assistant Secretary ofState (Western Hemisphere Affairs), viceThomas A. Shannon, Jr., resigned.

Thomas Alfred Shannon, Jr., of Virginia, aCareer Member of the Senior ForeignService, Class of Career Minister, to beAmbassador Extraordinary andPlenipotentiary of the United States ofAmerica to the Federative Republic of Brazil.

Patricia A. Butenis, of Virginia, a CareerMember of the Senior Foreign Service, Classof Minister-Counselor, to be AmbassadorExtraordinary and Plenipotentiary of theUnited States of America to the DemocraticSocialist Republic of Sri Lanka, and to serveconcurrently and without additionalcompensation as Ambassador Extraordinaryand Plenipotentiary of the United States ofAmerica to the Republic of Maldives.

Charles Aaron Ray, of Maryland, a CareerMember of the Senior Foreign Service, Classof Minister-Counselor, to be AmbassadorExtraordinary and Plenipotentiary of theUnited States of America to the Republic ofZimbabwe.

Gayleatha Beatrice Brown, of New Jersey, aCareer Member of the Senior ForeignService, Class of Minister-Counselor, to beAmbassador Extraordinary andPlenipotentiary of the United States ofAmerica to Burkina Faso.

Earl Michael Irving, of California, a CareerMember of the Senior Foreign Service, Classof Counselor, to be AmbassadorExtraordinary and Plenipotentiary of theUnited States of America to the Kingdom ofSwaziland.

Pamela Jo Howell Slutz, of Texas, a CareerMember of the Senior Foreign Service, Classof Minister-Counselor, to be AmbassadorExtraordinary and Plenipotentiary of theUnited States of America to the Republic ofBurundi.

Patricia Newton Moller, of Arkansas, a CareerMember of the Senior Foreign Service, Classof Minister-Counselor, to be AmbassadorExtraordinary and Plenipotentiary of theUnited States of America to the Republic ofGuinea.

Jerry P. Lanier, of North Carolina, a CareerMember of the Senior Foreign Service, Classof Counselor, to be AmbassadorExtraordinary and Plenipotentiary of theUnited States of America to the Republic ofUganda.

Alfonso E. Lenhardt, of New York, to beAmbassador Extraordinary andPlenipotentiary of the United States ofAmerica to the United Republic of Tanzania.

Samuel Louis Kaplan, of Minnesota, to beAmbassador Extraordinary andPlenipotentiary of the United States ofAmerica to the Kingdom of Morocco.

James B. Smith, of New Hampshire, to beAmbassador Extraordinary andPlenipotentiary of the United States ofAmerica to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

Miguel Humberto Diaz, of Minnesota, to beAmbassador Extraordinary andPlenipotentiary of the United States ofAmerica to the Holy See

Fay Hartog-Levin, of Illinois, to beAmbassador Extraordinary andPlenipotentiary of the United States ofAmerica to the Kingdom of the Netherlands.

Stephen J. Rapp, of Iowa, to be Ambassador atLarge for War Crimes Issues, vice John ClintWilliamson, resigned.

Donald Henry Gips, of Colorado, to beAmbassador Extraordinary andPlenipotentiary of the United States ofAmerica to the Republic of South Africa.

Ambassador Hill with Charlie Rose

July 20, 2009. Transcript of the interview is here.

H1N1 Flu Screening in China: People in hazmat suits come aboard the plane with laser beams


Video: Plane from San Francisco to Shanghai Pudong Airport arrives in Shanghai and pulls into the gate. Passengers are asked to remain in seats while people in white hazmat suits come aboard to take the temperature of every passenger by way of a laser beam aimed at their foreheads.

References:
A New Airport Ritual, Swine Flu Screening. NY Times.

Health News of the Day, part 2

Health News of the Day is a daily summary made from the selected links I post on Twitter. It is in a bullet points format with links to the original sources which include 350 RSS feeds that produce about 2,500 items per day.

  • Study: "Humans prefer cockiness to expertise". "Bad news for scientists who try to be honest about gaps in their knowledge: Humans prefer cockiness to expertise" http://bit.ly/ovuWg

  • A common blue food dye might provide the best treatment available so far for spinal cord injuries (in mice) http://bit.ly/f9zH9 Blue dye used in M&Ms and Gatorade may interrupt the cell death that follows spinal cord injury http://bit.ly/6iEIL -- Rats injected with BBG blue dye to treat spinal injury regained their mobility but temporarily turned blue. http://bit.ly/1GpnS

  • Tanning Beds Get Highest Carcinogen Rating: Melanoma risk rises 75 percent when device use begins before age 30 http://bit.ly/17jwfE

  • "NIH is encouraging its scientists to edit and even initiate Wikipedia articles in their fields." http://tr.im/uuyw

Medical news tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source/links, etc. The inclusion of a Twitter update (tweet) does not represent endorsement or agreement of any kind. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support.

Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain

Social Media Related Tweets and Insights

From my Twitter account:

  • Information Overload, the Index Medicus, and PubMed. PubMed contains 18,782,970 citations in the medical literature, adding over 670,000 new entries per year http://bit.ly/10DrLp

  • "How to Find out Who's using Facebook in your Hospital" and what to do if you don't like their "unofficial group" http://bit.ly/lR6tp

  • "Do You Have These Core Human Skills?" by Josh Kaufman http://bit.ly/hRIPi

  • A New Page: Can the Kindle really improve on the book? http://bit.ly/2WZjVj

  • British gov "Twitter policy" http://bit.ly/3lkYsL (organizations finally writing policies; now should think about strategies) via @giustini

  • A blog devoted to "Building an effective online presence for health professionals" http://bit.ly/9fJMh

  • Will one Chicago woman's Tweet cost her $50,000 in the form of a defamation lawsuit? http://bit.ly/VXvXK

  • Paul Krugman gets 1200 or more comments to his opinion pieces. http://bit.ly/R94Qs

  • Fed boss Bernanke faces personal downturn: His net worth dropped by almost a third in last year http://bit.ly/FOZYh

Medical news tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source/links, etc. The inclusion of a Twitter update (tweet) does not represent endorsement or agreement of any kind. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support.

Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

Video: "Ben Goldacre on MMR, autism and media mendacity"



From Wikipedia:

Ben Goldacre is a British medical doctor and journalist, and the author of the The Guardian newspaper's weekly Bad Science column.

Health News of the Day

Health News of the Day is a daily summary made from the selected links I post on Twitter. It is in a bullet points format with links to the original sources which include 350 RSS feeds that produce about 2,500 items per day.

  • Divorce and death of a spouse frequently have long-term negative consequences for health, even in people who remarry. People who were divorced or widowed were 20% more likely to have heart disease, diabetes, cancer http://bit.ly/3nko5A

  • Higher speed limits led to about 12,500 more deaths on US roads between 1995 and 2005. In 1974, Maximum Speed Law put a 55 mph speed limit on all interstate roads - led to 16.4% drop in car crash mortality http://bit.ly/4ryZS7
  • NIH stopped a trial of sildenafil (Viagra) in sickle cell patients with pulmonary HTN due to serious medical problems. "30% of sickle cell disease patients develop pulmonary hypertension, which can kill them suddenly" http://bit.ly/Wp6lu -- Sildenafil works in symptomatic pulmonary arterial hypertension according to a 2005 NEJM study http://bit.ly/SRcGE - but this trial was in sickle cell disease patients. There is another ongoing study: Sildenafil for Treatment of Priapism in Men With Sickle Cell Anemia http://bit.ly/2sNt0Z

  • WHO: Tanning Beds Cause Melanoma, moved UV tanning beds to its highest cancer risk category -"carcinogenic to humans" http://bit.ly/mZA6A

  • Early review by a respiratory physician leads to a shorter length of stay in non-severe community-acquired pneumonia http://bit.ly/ulezb

  • Jen McCabe Gorman shares her experience on YouTube as she opens her genetic profile results from 23andMe http://bit.ly/NwYY

  • PubMed: The commonest reason for inserting foreign bodies http://bit.ly/1bbFcE

  • CSF biomarkers for Alzheimer’s: A42, T-tau, P-tau (amyloid1-42, total tau protein, tau phosphorylated position 181 threonine)

Medical news tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source/links, etc. The inclusion of a Twitter update (tweet) does not represent endorsement or agreement of any kind. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support.

Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

US Mission Mexico: Some Good News, Some Bad News

Well run mission but possibility for officer burnout and internal controls breakdown

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, accompanied byCharge d'Affaires Leslie A. Bassett, inaugurates newly constructedworkspace to increase the visa processing capacity of theConsular Section of the U.S.Embassy in Mexico City.March 25, 2009, Mexico City. [State Department photo]

The OIG has released its recent inspection report on US Mission Mexico. Initially marked "SBU" or Sensitive But Unclassified, the OIG reports are normally posted online not too long after their official release. Some of these reports are redacted and there are classified portions that the public do not get to see but they usually give a fuller look on the operation of every section in an embassy within a specific time frame. These reports identify systemic problems such as lack of resources and normally gives a rundown on internal challenges like morale and staffing, and external factors such as local challenges and policy impact.OIG inspections make some bad managers jittery; but methinks this is an excellent tool for great managers constantly looking at improving their operations. Why? Well, for one thing, State is not known for having a risk-averse culture for nothing; really. Not very many people are going to march into the Front Office and tell their ambassador here is what's wrong 1,2,3. Second, it's lonely at the top (this is not necessarily unique to the Foreign Service). Once you're in the Front Office (or in the executive suite), people tend to tell you things that they think you want to hear. But what they won't tell the boss, they might tell the OIG inspectors.

This inspection took place in Washington, DC, between August 4 and October 3, 2008; in Mexico City between October 6 and November 25, 2008. Bush appointee from Texas, Antonio O. Garza, Jr., was the US Ambassador to Mexico from 2002-2009. His number 2, was career diplomat, Leslie A. Bassett who is currently the DCM at US Embassy Manila and was the Deputy Chief of Mission in Mexico when this inspection was conducted.

Almost everyone knows that the US Mission in Mexico is big. But you don’t realize how big until you see the numbers. If confirmed as US Ambassador to Mexico, Carlos Pascual will have his hands full. From the OIG report:

Mission Mexico, consisting of an embassy, seven consulates general, two consulates, and 14 consular agencies, is one of the largest U.S. missions in the world. The magnitude of the consular operation is staggering: 20 percent of all arrests of Americans abroad occur in a single consular district in Tijuana. Consulate General Ciudad Juarez processes more IVs than any other post in the world. Embassy Mexico City processes more NIVs than any other post in the world except Embassy Seoul.

Because of the consular workload, 10 percent of all entry-level officers (ELO) in the U.S. Foreign Service are assigned to Mexican posts. With such numbers, Mexican experience will have an important influence on the next generation of Foreign Service officers.

The OIG team found that Mission Mexico is well run, with strong leadership from the Ambassador and DCM. Morale is generally good. The Ambassador and the DCM promote entry-level professional development. Interagency coordination and cooperation is outstanding. Mission Mexico is a success in representing and advancing the interests of the United States in a key country. The mission is, however, significantly understaffed and underfunded.

The consular workload per individual officer already exceeds worldwide norms. For example, in Consulate General Ciudad Juarez, each officer must process almost twice as many IVs as the other large IV processing posts elsewhere in the world. The NIV workload for the mission will dramatically increase in the next few years as the mission is expected to receive more than five million applications for renewal of border crossing cards. The Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative will require uncounted numbers of American citizens resident in Mexico to acquire passports for the first time. The violence associated with narcotics traffickers has dramatically increased the workload of the mission’s security officers, and introduces uncertainty in projecting the workload of most mission operations. Implementation of President Bush’s and President Calderon’s Merida Initiative against narcotics traffickers will increase the staffing levels in Mexico City by more than 50.

Up to now, Staffing in the management section has failed to keep pace with even the modest growth in consular and other staffing. It is altogether inadequate to support the projected large increases in consular and Merida Initiative staffing.

Bottomline?

Resource shortages will result in officer burnout and the breakdown of internal controls.

Unless addressed, the shortage of resources will jeopardize Mission Mexico’s current success in meeting its goals.

Related Item:OIG Report Number ISP-I-09-21A |Embassy Mexico City, Mexico | April 2009

SFRC Hearings: Aaron Williams

Wednesday, July 29, 2009NOMINATIONS Time: 2:30 P.M.Place: 419 Dirksen Senate Office Building

Aaron S. Williams, of Virginia To be Director of the Peace Corps

The WH released the following brief bio: Currently a Vice President for International Business Development with RTI International, Aaron Williams has over 25 years of experience in the design and implementation of worldwide assistance programs. As a senior manager at the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), where he attained the rank of Career Minister in the US Senior Foreign Service, and as Executive Vice President at the International Youth Foundation, Mr. Williams established innovative public-private partnerships around the world. As USAID Mission Director in South Africa, Mr. Williams led a billion dollar foreign assistance program during President Nelson Mandela’s administration.

In addition to his work in South Africa, he has extensive experience in the strategic design and management of assistance programs in Latin America, Africa, Asia and the Middle East; including long-term assignments in Honduras, Haiti, Costa Rica, and Barbados and the Eastern Caribbean islands region. In addition to his tenure with USAID, Mr. Williams served on the Advisory Committee on Voluntary Foreign Aid at USAID. Mr. Williams was awarded the USAID Distinguished Career Service Award and the Presidential Award for Distinguished Service twice. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, and he serves on the Advisory Board of the Ron Brown Scholar Program, the Board of Directors of CARE, and the Board of Directors of the National Peace Corps Association.Mr. Williams served as a Peace Corps Volunteer in the Dominican Republic (1967-70). Upon completing his service, he became the Coordinator of Minority Recruitment and Project Evaluation Officer for the Peace Corps in Chicago (1970-71). Mr. Williams is fluent in Spanish. He is a graduate of Chicago State University, and has an MBA from the University of Wisconsin.

Related Item:President Obama Announces Intent to Nominate Aaron Williams as Director of the Peace Corps, 7/14

Health News of the Day, part 2

Health News of the Day is a daily summary made from the selected links I post on Twitter. It is in a bullet points format with links to the original sources which include 350 RSS feeds that produce about 2,500 items per day.

Medical news tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source/links, etc. The inclusion of a Twitter update (tweet) does not represent endorsement or agreement of any kind. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support.

Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

Last surviving British soldier from World War I died at the age of 111, didn't speak about the war until he turned 100

From CNN:

Harry Patch -- the last surviving British soldier from World War I -- died On July 25 at the age of 111.

Patch was the last surviving soldier to have witnessed the horrors of trench warfare in the first World War. He fought and was seriously wounded in Belgium, in 1917 at the Battle of Passchendaele, in which 70,000 of his fellow soldiers died -- including three of his close friends.

His wife died in 1976, and their two sons also later died. Patch remarried in 1980, but he became a widower for the second time four years later.

Patch didn't speak about the war until he turned 100. "He tried to suppress the memories and to live as normal a life as possible; the culture of his time said that he was fortunate to have survived and that he should get on with his life."

Patch returned to Belgium in 2002, something he had said he would never do, and laid a wreath to his battalion. Two years later, he met and shook hands with a German artilleryman from the Western Front. Patch later laid a wreath at Langemark Cemetery for the German war dead.

References:
Last British Army WWI veteran dead at 111. CNN.
Harry Patch, from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Image source: Wikipedia, Photo of Harry Patch, Jim Ross, GNU Free Documentation License.

Do you delete your tweets?

Do you delete your tweets? I do it all the time. All tweets that do not make sense in single view, especially replies like "yes/no" get deleted. Also, I delete most conversational ones that make little sense without the tweet they replied to. See the example below: http://bit.ly/133smM

Ves Dimov, M.D.
DrVes@Allergy Agree.

The drawback of Twitter, as compared to FriendFeed, is that you can't see a conversation string without using other services.

I treat tweets like words in a word processor - delete, change and replace until you get the meaning right. A tweet is not a blog post.

Social Media Related Tweets and Insights

From my Twitter account:

  • A Small Study Reveals High Levels of Twitter Use at (Non-medical) Conferences: 95% of (non-medical) conference attendees already had a Twitter account, 67% used it to tweet during the conference. 74% of non-medical conference attendees send 11-20 Twitter messages per day, 51% discussed topics via @ replies and DMs. The data sample was too small - only 5 conferences and 41attendees http://bit.ly/4miqX5

  • Video: Where is Matt? (2008) - 42 countries, and a cast of thousands http://bit.ly/t0cAV

  • "Blogosphere gives hospitals, medical talk an outlet" http://bit.ly/OX6gY

  • The Business Insider: "What A Nigerian Facebook Scam Looks Like" http://bit.ly/QEWHV

  • The Big Picture: Stories from Israel, Tanzania and Malaysia http://bit.ly/3jCuah

  • How to Create a Walking Tour with Google City Tours http://bit.ly/JXLD3

Medical news tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source/links, etc. The inclusion of a Twitter update (tweet) does not represent endorsement or agreement of any kind. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support.

Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

Health News of the Day

Health News of the Day is a daily summary made from the selected links I post on Twitter. It is in a bullet points format with links to the original sources which include 350 RSS feeds that produce about 2,500 items per day.

  • Obesity costs the U.S. health care system up to $147 billion a year: An extra $1,429 per year for each obese person. http://bit.ly/dvSOz -- CDC: Recommended Community Strategies and Measurements to Prevent Obesity in the United States http://bit.ly/oP3t6

  • "Unskilled and unaware of it: how difficulties in recognizing one's own incompetence lead to inflated self-assessments." Study participants scoring in bottom quartile on tests of humor, grammar, and logic grossly overestimated their ability http://bit.ly/9UJxO

  • Proposed ban on drug commercials: ads take advantage of hypochondriacs, lead pts to pressure doctors for prescriptions. Critics say the ads overstate benefits and understate risks. http://bit.ly/dDMZf

  • No surprise: Adults with high leisure-time Internet and computer use were more likely to be overweight or obese http://bit.ly/raMd9

  • What is coup d'ongle sign in pityriasis versicolor? Scratch sign (coup d'ongle, Besnier's) in pityriasis versicolor is loosing of barely perceptible scale with a fingernail http://bit.ly/G7zPu

  • Migrant doctors: Over half of primary care doctors are from abroad http://bit.ly/Soe9z

Medical news tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source/links, etc. The inclusion of a Twitter update (tweet) does not represent endorsement or agreement of any kind. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support.

Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

Pre-order Contest for Bran Hambric (US Only)

BUY BEFORE 9/9/09 and WIN!-- (US ONLY)

Any person who pre-orders Bran Hambric: The Farfield Curse, and sends their e-receipt or scanned receipt to sbpublicity@sourcebooks.com will be entered into a drawing to win one of the following prizes:

- Personalized first-edition copy of The Farfield Curse (give your copy to a friend!)
- Personalized early reader copy of Book 2
- Personalized Bran Hambric poster
- Half Moon Necklace
- Signed CD of soundtrack
- $25 gift certificate to local bookstore
- Kaleb Nation event at local bookstore (fall 2010)

One entry per book ordered (so as many entries as books ordered). Receipts must be dated prior to pub date – September 9, 2009 and bear the subject heading “Bran Hambric Pre-Order Competition.” Winners to be announced September 30, 2009!

Monday, July 27, 2009

SFRC Hearings: Eacho, Barzun, Foley, Murphy, Garber, Bass

COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN RELATIONSUNITED STATES SENATEONE HUNDRED ELEVENTH CONGRESSFIRST SESSION

Date:Tuesday, July 28, 2009Time: Immediately following the2:15 p.m. business meetingPlace: 419 Dirksen Senate Office BuildingPresiding: Senator Shaheen

Panel 1:

William Carlton Eacho III, of Maryland to be Ambassador to the Republic of Austria

Matthew Winthrop Barzun, of Kentucky to be Ambassador to Sweden

James B. Foley, of New York to be Ambassador to the Republic of Croatia

Philip D. Murphy, of New Jersey to be Ambassador to the Federal Republic of Germany

Panel 2:

Judith Gail Garber, of Virginia to be Ambassador to the Republic of Latvia

John R. Bass, of New York to be Ambassador to Georgia

Click here to see the confirmation hearing statements and videos.

SFRC Hearings: Posner, Jones, Cousin, Killion, Kornbluh, Davies

COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN RELATIONSUNITED STATES SENATEONE HUNDRED ELEVENTH CONGRESSFIRST SESSION

Date: Tuesday, July 28, 2009Time: 9:30 A.M.Place: 419 Dirksen Senate Office BuildingPresiding: Senator Boxer

Nominees:

Panel 1:

  • Michael H. Posner, of New York to be Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy,Human Rights, and Labor
  • The Honorable Kerri-Ann Jones, of Maine to be Assistant Secretary of State for Oceans andInternational Environmental and Scientific Affairs

Panel 2:

  • Ertharin Cousin, of Illinois for the rank of Ambassador during her tenure ofservice as U.S. Representative to theUnited Nations Agencies for Food and Agriculture
  • David Killion, of the District of Columbia for the rank of Ambassador during his tenureof service as United States PermanentRepresentative to the United Nations Educational,Scientific, and Cultural Organization
  • Karen Kornbluh, of New York to be Representative of the United States to theOrganization for Economic Cooperation andDevelopment, with the rank of Ambassador
  • The Honorable Glyn T. Davies, of the District of Columbia to be Representative of the United States to theVienna Office of the United Nations, with the rank of Ambassador, and to be Representative of theUnited States to the International Atomic EnergyAgency, with the rank of Ambassador

Click here to see the confirmation hearing statements and videos.

Mailbox Monday - July 27


Well I'm late in posting again but I'm back from camp and when I got back there was a large pile of mail for me to go through! Yippee!! I also had two more come in since I got back from camp.

As usual, I'll list them and a little info on them below and then book covers and a chance to purchase them at amazon will be below that. Thanks for visiting.

Check out what others received this past week at The Printed Page.

Tell Me a Story 3: Women of Wonder by Amy Friedman (Audio Book) - I was contacted directly by the author. I don't normally do audio books but this is a children's audio book and the subject matter (legendary heroines and goddesses) appealed to me so I thought I'd try it.

Kidding Around The Kitchen: A Family Cookbook by Lisa Elaina - through Alison of AJG Public Relations and Communications. It's a spiral bound book with some fun recipes (doesn't seem to be available at amazon)

Your Family Constitution: A Modern Approach to Family Values and Household Structure by Scott Gale - This one is through Bostick Communications and looks pretty good. It says it's a guide for: reconnecting with your kids, anticipating and resolving common family issues, enhancing family communication and enjoying parenting to the fullest.

Runaway Devil by Robert Remington - from Random House, it's a true crime story about what happened to Marc and Debra and their son Jacob in Medicine Hat, Alberta on April 23, 2006 and how their daughter JR came to commit the crime.

No Kids: 40 Good Reasons Not To Have Children by Corinne Maier - from McClelland & Stewart. I have two kids, my husband has three and we'd like to have another one in the next few years. One of my uncles does not have children however and I've always wondered what it would be like to not have kids. I said yes to this book because I was curious what their reasons were.

Those were all the review books, however I also won the Hachette Dads and Grads contest at Book Dads. Here's what I won:

The Man's Book by Thomas Fink (another copy, I already have one to review, I'll pass this on to someone)
Lincoln on Leadership by Donald T. Phillips (Executive Strategies for Tough Times)
An Honorable German: A Novel of World War II by Charles McCain
Boneman's Daughters by Ted Dekker (thriller)
The Richest Man in Town: The Twelve Commandements of Wealth by W. Randall Jones
The Nine Lessons by Kevin Alan Milne (novel of love, fatherhood and second chances)
Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell (has everyone else read this??)
Do-Over! by Robin Hemley (in which a 48 year old father of three returns to kindergarten, summer camp, the prom and other embarassments)

Although most of these are aimed at guys, I plan on reading all but the Honorable German one and possible Lincoln one although my husband may read those. I will be sure to share with a bunch of guys when I'm done LOL.








Health News of the Day, part 2

Health News of the Day is a daily summary made from the selected links I post on Twitter. It is in a bullet points format with links to the original sources which include 350 RSS feeds that produce about 2,500 items per day.

  • The antihistamine ketotifen and cromolyn successfully treat diabetes and obesity in mice. Mast cells are abundant in fat tissues of obese and diabetic people and mice. Antihistamines could work as new therapy http://bit.ly/1UKKt4

  • Evolution study: Women are getting more beautiful, while men remain as aesthetically unappealing as their caveman ancestors http://bit.ly/1a9bas

  • 101 Simple Salads for the Season - NY Times http://bit.ly/SIw0H

  • In the Clinic Slide Sets from Annals of Internal Medicine http://bit.ly/Q6Oe - Smoking Cessation - Free Sample. The cover of Annals of Internal Medicine is not what you expect... :) http://bit.ly/3aK5a2

  • Contador, 26 wins 2nd Tour de France; Lance Armstrong, 37 capped his return to race with an impressive 3rd-place finish. 37-year-old Armstrong, seven-time Tour champion, is the second-oldest rider to reach the Tour podium http://bit.ly/M7u3s

  • The greatest racehorse of all time was "perfectly average" - BBC: http://bit.ly/zpl4M and http://bit.ly/QYfPR

Medical news tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source/links, etc. The inclusion of a Twitter update (tweet) does not represent endorsement or agreement of any kind. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support.

Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

Health News of the Day

Health News of the Day is a daily summary made from the selected links I post on Twitter. It is in a bullet points format with links to the original sources which include 350 RSS feeds that produce about 2,500 items per day.

  • In the Clinic Slide Sets from Annals of Internal Medicine http://bit.ly/Q6Oe - Smoking Cessation - Free Sample

Medical news tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source/links, etc. The inclusion of a Twitter update (tweet) does not represent endorsement or agreement of any kind. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support.

Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.