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avivajazz  jazzaviva

Science in the Open | Friendfeed for Scientists | What, Why, and How? - 0 views

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    friendfeed science medicine scientists doctors physicians researchers biomedicine biomedical socialmedia socialnetworking "social media" "social networking" medicine2.0 healthcare2.0 profession professional web2.0 lifestream lifestreams streaming streams
avivajazz  jazzaviva

Journal of Participatory Medicine (JoPM) | New, Peer-Reviewed, Open-Access - 0 views

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    Participatory medicine will owe part of its success to the technologies that have the potential to remove treatment, symptom management, administrative, and communications burdens from individuals and clinicians while maintaining the critical interpersonal interactions between them. Out of the steady stream of new devices, programs, gadgets, and applications, which will make a difference in the health and lives of patients? We hope to build the Journal as a resource for critical reviews of technologies that support and facilitate participatory medicine. We realize it will be no small undertaking to put together a process that will allow for the review of a substantial number of technologies over time, reflecting the experience of different types of users.
avivajazz  jazzaviva

Antidepressant Medicines - A Guide for Adults With Depression - AHRQ Effective Health C... - 0 views

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    Available forms: PDF, Download Audio, Listen to Audio Stream
avivajazz  jazzaviva

As Nest Eggs Shrink, Some Doctors Try to Return From Retirement | Health Blog | WSJ - 0 views

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    I want to commend, and cry over, what WP wrote: "What I am seeing in needy areas are things/conditions I thought only existed in previous distant centuries. The patient populations have been well described by Charles Dickens and depicted graphically by Giordano in his opera set during the French revolution…a stream of ragged peasants limping across the stage, right here in the United States, in 2009." I can vouch for it here in Vermont…right next to Dartmouth's great Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center in Hanover, NH…where - at BEST - most Blue Cross/Blue Shield of Vermont clients CANNOT find a primary care physician (PCP) taking new patients… and where - at WORST - several women I know are choosing to die from their breast cancer because they cannot afford medical care and will not burden their kids or society. One woman has an MA in Counseling, and the other a PhD in Human Nutrition. These are not uneducated people… But they are most definitely poverty-stricken…and were poor before the 2008 global economic collapse.
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