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Frederick Smith

The tire iron and the tamale - 0 views

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    During a roadside breakdown, who didn't stop, and who did (by Justin Horner, graphic designer in Oregon) - a pretty close parallel to the Good Samaritan parable.
Frederick Smith

When demented patients receive feeding tubes - by Paula Span - 0 views

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    So for nursing home residents with advanced dementia, sons and daughters often opt to return the favor - even though the medical consensus is that it's not a favor. Most dementia patients will eventually develop problems with eating and swallowing as the disease progresses, but feeding them through surgically implanted tubes has not been shown to improve their survival, to prevent pneumonia or heal bedsores, or to improve their quality of life. Nevertheless, about a third of nursing home residents with advanced dementia do receive feeding tubes, usually during a hospitalization.
Frederick Smith

Health & Religion course at North Shore U Hosp - 0 views

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    by Paul Moses - Newsday - 6/29/2001 DR. FREDERICK SMITH has the usual textbooks on ambulatory care, surgery and prescription drugs in his office. But the shelves also hold D.T.Suzuki's "Essays in Zen Buddhism," a volume of Cardinal John Henry Newman's writings, books on Confucianism and Judaism, the Quran and alarge-type, 69-year-old Bible a patient gave him, so worn that its cover has fallen off. These, too, are tools of Smith's trade. As associate chief of internal medicine at North Shore University Hospital in Manhasset, the gray-bearded, 56-year-old physician has found that religious faith can help his patients,and he's trying to teach that to a generation of up-and-coming doctors. His 2-year-old course, Religion and Medicine, is part of a growing move to sensitize doctors to the role faith plays in their patients' lives. It gives residents at North Shore who've completed medical school but are still receiving some training a chance to learn about their patients' religious traditions....
Frederick Smith

When Doctors Become Patients - By ERIC D. MANHEIMER (Bellevue med dir) - 0 views

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    I refused further radiation and chemotherapy. I lay in my bed and watched the events around me - the distress of my family, the helplessness of my doctors - without anxiety, comfortable that I had made the correct decision. My doctors couldn't override it or persuade me to change my mind, but, luckily, my wife, Diana, could and did. From my mental cocoon in the hospital bed, I could sense Diana at my side. "You're going to finish the treatment," she said softly. I did not have the energy, or perhaps the will, to disagree. She wheeled me down herself to finish my radiation treatments in the basement of the hospital.
Frederick Smith

Don't Fear Islamic Law in America - By ELIYAHU STERN - 0 views

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    Given time, American Muslims, like all other religious minorities before them, will adjust their legal and theological traditions, if necessary, to accord with American values. America's exceptionalism has always been its ability to transform itself - economically, culturally and religiously. In the 20th century, we thrived by promoting a Judeo-Christian ethic, respecting differences and accentuating commonalities among Jews, Catholics and Protestants. Today, we need an Abrahamic ethic that welcomes Islam into the religious tapestry of American life. Anti-Shariah legislation fosters a hostile environment that will stymie the growth of America's tolerant strand of Islam. The continuation of America's pluralistic religious tradition depends on the ability to distinguish between punishing groups that support terror and blaming terrorist activities on a faith that represents roughly a quarter of the world's population.
Frederick Smith

In Honor of Teachers - By CHARLES M. BLOW - 0 views

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    Since it's back-to-school season across the country, I wanted to celebrate a group that is often maligned: teachers. Like so many others, it was a teacher who changed the direction of my life, and to whom I'm forever indebted.
Frederick Smith

What the Left Doesn't Understand About Obama - By JONATHAN CHAIT - 0 views

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    Liberal critics of Obama, just like conservative critics of Republican presidents, generally want both maximal partisan conflict and maximal legislative achievement. In the real world, those two things are often at odds. Hence the allure of magical thinking.
Frederick Smith

The Mechanic Muse - From Scroll to Screen - 0 views

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    God knows, there was great literature before there was the codex, and should it pass away, there will be great literature after it. But if we stop reading on paper, we should keep in mind what we're sacrificing: that nonlinear experience, which is unique to the codex. You don't get it from any other medium - not movies, or TV, or music or video games. The codex won out over the scroll because it did what good technologies are supposed to do: It gave readers a power they never had before, power over the flow of their own reading experience. And until I hear God personally say to me, "Boot up and read," I won't be giving it up.
Frederick Smith

Shortcuts (Your Money): Too Many Choices: A Problem That Can Paralyze - 0 views

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    >"...Offering a default option of opting in, rather than opting out (as many have suggested with organ donations as well) doesn't take away choice but guides us to make better ones, according to Richard H. Thaler, an economics professor at the University of Chicago, and Cass R. Sunstein, a professor at Chicago's law school, authors of "Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth and Happiness". Making choices can be most difficult in the area of health. While we don't want to go back to the days when doctors unilaterally determined what was best, there may be ways of changing policy so that families are not forced to make unbearable choices. >Professor Iyengar and some colleagues compared how American and French families coped after making the heart-wrenching decision to withdraw life-sustaining treatment from an infant. In the United States, parents must make the decision to end the treatment, while in France, the doctors decide, unless explicitly challenged by the parents. >French families weren't as angry or confused about what had happened, and focused much less on how things might have been or should have been than the American parents.
Frederick Smith

Cancer's Secrets Come Into Sharper Focus - 0 views

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    role of micro-RNAs, and biogenome (interacting with local human cells)
Frederick Smith

Stereotyping Pts & Dx - 0 views

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    by Danielle Ofri
Frederick Smith

Undoc'd Worker,Hi Med Need - 0 views

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    by Sanjay Basu, MD
Frederick Smith

Responses to P. Chen, http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/08/11/letting-doctors-make-the... - 0 views

1  . Old Colonial Texas, now August 11th, 2011 1:10 pm What is critical here is the concept of long-term relationships between doctors and their patients, which most states are now destr...

autonomy & beneficence doctor expertise nytimes.com pauline chen bioethics

started by Frederick Smith on 15 Aug 11 no follow-up yet
Frederick Smith

Well: Letting Doctors Make the Tough Decisions, by Pauline Chen - 0 views

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    Autonomy has limits - pts want docs to exercise expertise.
Frederick Smith

Williamsburg-on-Hudson - 0 views

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    Hudson River valley's culture+nature attracts NYC emigres
Frederick Smith

M.Gerson, Two parties pray to the same God, but different economists - 0 views

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    Justifying economic beliefs by religion. Does Christianity require special care for poor?
Frederick Smith

How the Deficit Got This Big - by Teresa Tricth - 0 views

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    Contributions of GWB policies, & 2 recessions, to deficit
Frederick Smith

Pharma with a chance of meatballs - 0 views

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    Hilarious 3-D cartoon of PHARMA's efforts to force Mass. legislature to repeal ban on drug reps "free lunches" for docs, to push brand-name drugs - in the name of "helping restaurants during the recession."
Frederick Smith

Five myths about why the South seceded, by James W. Loewen - 0 views

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    Ensuring the continuation of slavery was, overwhelmingly, the chief cause of Southern states' secession and the Civil War.
Frederick Smith

The Future of Religious Violence, by Tim Muldoon - 0 views

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    "Religion was supposed to die of asphyxiation in the wake of modernity, but the opposite has proven to be the case. So the options aren't religion or no religion; the options are good religion or bad religion. I'm voting for the former, meaning a critical understanding of power in religious traditions."
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