2 Quick Updates,
First, on Health Care Reform:
Senator Baucus just released the new bill with more than 500 amendments (including all of the ones offered by Senator Snow, potentially the only Republican who will vote for it). The bill purportedly includes an amendment to cut the fine for not having health insurance, and increases the threshold for taxation of high cost insurance plans (tax to insurer, not person). These changes were made to try to increase affordability for low- and middle income people. The mandate still stands and is unlikely (and hopefully) not something that the Committee will budge on. Like Speaker Pelosi has (and many others have) said, we need to make sure everyone is included so that the risk is dispersed among all of us.
Read more at the NPR Health Blog and from the Wall Street Journal article.
Thoughts on health reform that have come up in recent conversations (and aren't really being addressed by this bill...yet):
- should people with expensive-to-treat illnesses have to pay more for health insurance (e.g. someone with cystic fibrosis or type 2 diabetes, who is much more likely to use the services of a hospital)
-Does it make a difference if the illness is hereditary, accidental, or behavior-related? (Type 2 diabetes from obesity v. type 1 diabetes, which is hereditary; or cystic fibrosis, which is inherited, versus cancers from smoking?)
-Should we be able to tax behaviors, such as drinking pop (aka soda, if you're not from the midwest), smoking, alcohol, even fast food - to pay for health care to try to compensate for these costs?
-For the economists out there: would they ever actually compensate for the costs of these behaviors to the health care system?
Second update on med students and lack of professionalism:
We physicians-in-training are not doing a great job of assuring our future patients that we are worth trusting. JAMA just released a paper citing a huge lack of online decorum by medical students. This may seem like nothing compared with the very public trial earlier in the year for a second year medical student at BU who was arrested for murders of women who he met on Craigslist (read more on Boston Globe website)
We had a lot of lectures during orientation and our first block about professionalism - and while many of the topics discussed could seem minor compared to the vast amount of scientific knowledge we're trying to learn - I think it may be the most important.
One of our greatest professors here said that his friend's father was a physician and every time he would leave the house, he would put on a tie. He said that there was always a chance he would run into a previous patient, a current patient, or a future patient - and he wanted them to know that there doctor took his profession seriously. I clearly won't be wearing a tie every time I leave my house (in fact, I'm just embracing wearing jeans again), I do think that you are allowed to have higher expectations for someone to whom you are telling your most intimate life details, who you are letting examine your naked body, and who you are trusting to help you make the best decisions you can about your health.
That said, medical school is quite hard - and incredibly time consuming. The commitment that the path to medicine requires is near total and by embarking on it, you are choosing to have less free time for people and fun - which is not to excuse these students but to provide a framework for understanding the need for a comedic release. But no one tells you medical school will be easy - if anything, they tell you it will be the hardest thing you have done yet. As medical students and future physicians, we really have to consider that even though it may be an arduous path, if we want our patients to trust us, if we want society to continue to hold doctors on such high moral ground, we have to honor this profession, tie or no tie.
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“The greater danger for most of us lies not in setting our aim too high and falling short; but in setting our aim too low, and achieving our mark.”
-Michaelangelo
"when we try to pick out anything by itself, we find that it is hitched to everything else in the universe" - j.muir soul|medicine|women|health|citizen|tribe|home
September 23, 2009
September 16, 2009
infections and wrinkles
random thing I learned today (and maybe this is more common knowledge than I thought):
botulism, like the bacteria you're worried about getting from your canned goods that aren't acidic enough, is caused by a bacteria called Clostridium botulinum. But that's not the exciting part - how the bacteria works is by infecting your neuro-muscular junctions (the parts of your body where nerves connect to muscle to stimulate them to flex). When it infects these junctions, it inhibits the release of a neurotransmitter, called Acetylcholinase (it's like, THE neurotransmitter). This prevents any signaling from the neurotransmitter to the muscle, so the muscle cannot be enervated - or flex.
Horrible infection that causes breathing problems and often requires hospitalization with insertion of all sorts of breathing machines, feeding tubes, etc. If you suspect you have Botulism - call your doctor or go to the ER - type stuff. Treatment is with an antitoxin that kills the bacteria and reverses the symptoms.
BUT! (this is the crazy part) the bacteria are exactly what are used in Botox - like the thing you inject into your forehead to prevent wrinkles. In fact, Bo-tox stands for "botulism toxin". Apparently all over the US and world people are injecting toxic bacteria that inhibit neuromuscular junctions INTO THEIR FACES to prevent their facial muscles from flexing into positions that could cause them wrinkles. This explains why the risks of Botox include that you may hit a neuromuscular junction that matters - and get a droopy eye or something. Lucky for people interested in Botox, the effects don't last very long at the concentration given. So if you get a droopy eye it will only be for about four to six months. WHAT?!?!
I guess I haven't thought much about reducing the signs of aging. I've had a wrinkle on my forehead since I started reading, and I kinda dig it. But maybe I'll feel differently in a few decades...
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"I wonder if I can grow fangs when my baby teeth fall out"
-Bill Waterson in Calvin and Hobbes
botulism, like the bacteria you're worried about getting from your canned goods that aren't acidic enough, is caused by a bacteria called Clostridium botulinum. But that's not the exciting part - how the bacteria works is by infecting your neuro-muscular junctions (the parts of your body where nerves connect to muscle to stimulate them to flex). When it infects these junctions, it inhibits the release of a neurotransmitter, called Acetylcholinase (it's like, THE neurotransmitter). This prevents any signaling from the neurotransmitter to the muscle, so the muscle cannot be enervated - or flex.
Horrible infection that causes breathing problems and often requires hospitalization with insertion of all sorts of breathing machines, feeding tubes, etc. If you suspect you have Botulism - call your doctor or go to the ER - type stuff. Treatment is with an antitoxin that kills the bacteria and reverses the symptoms.
BUT! (this is the crazy part) the bacteria are exactly what are used in Botox - like the thing you inject into your forehead to prevent wrinkles. In fact, Bo-tox stands for "botulism toxin". Apparently all over the US and world people are injecting toxic bacteria that inhibit neuromuscular junctions INTO THEIR FACES to prevent their facial muscles from flexing into positions that could cause them wrinkles. This explains why the risks of Botox include that you may hit a neuromuscular junction that matters - and get a droopy eye or something. Lucky for people interested in Botox, the effects don't last very long at the concentration given. So if you get a droopy eye it will only be for about four to six months. WHAT?!?!
I guess I haven't thought much about reducing the signs of aging. I've had a wrinkle on my forehead since I started reading, and I kinda dig it. But maybe I'll feel differently in a few decades...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"I wonder if I can grow fangs when my baby teeth fall out"
-Bill Waterson in Calvin and Hobbes
September 11, 2009
The Evolutionary Advantage of Microbes
Right now we're working on the fastest biochem review in the history of the world. Okay, so maybe not in the history of the world, but definitely in my world. As a class, I think although we have times of being really frustrated, we're all nerdy enough that learning about bacteria, viruses, and protein misfolding is really really cool. One of our professors who has been teaching us about different types of pathogens answered a question posed by a classmate the other day, about WHY something happened with: "Instead of asking "Why" in science, which is very hard to answer - ask "What is the evolutionary advantage of this..." and I just totally dug it.
Antibacterial medication is now super common because we discovered (totally by accident - see: Alexander Fleming and look under "accidental discovery")that because bacteria had been competing amongst themselves for food, space, and other supplies, they (and plants and fungi) had developed nasty ways of getting rid of each other. But then evolution skipped right past super helpful to somewhat harmful - this getting rid of each other resulted in the selection of bacteria who were resistant to some of these defenses, thereby introducing resistance to antibacterials. It's not that bacteria are super smart...at all. It's just that there are so many of them, that they can naturally select for THE MOST ADVANTAGEOUS traits - even if there's only a one in a million chance of a certain gene being incorporated in a certain place, because there are probably one million bacteria on my body right now (and yours).
While I still am anxiously awaiting our anatomy labs - learning about pathogens and how they evade even our best scientific knowledge is pretty fascinating.
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“I have been trying to point out that in our lives chance may have an astonishing influence and, if I may offer advice to the young laboratory worker, it would be this - never to neglect an extraordinary appearance or happening.”
-Alexander Fleming
Antibacterial medication is now super common because we discovered (totally by accident - see: Alexander Fleming and look under "accidental discovery")that because bacteria had been competing amongst themselves for food, space, and other supplies, they (and plants and fungi) had developed nasty ways of getting rid of each other. But then evolution skipped right past super helpful to somewhat harmful - this getting rid of each other resulted in the selection of bacteria who were resistant to some of these defenses, thereby introducing resistance to antibacterials. It's not that bacteria are super smart...at all. It's just that there are so many of them, that they can naturally select for THE MOST ADVANTAGEOUS traits - even if there's only a one in a million chance of a certain gene being incorporated in a certain place, because there are probably one million bacteria on my body right now (and yours).
While I still am anxiously awaiting our anatomy labs - learning about pathogens and how they evade even our best scientific knowledge is pretty fascinating.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
“I have been trying to point out that in our lives chance may have an astonishing influence and, if I may offer advice to the young laboratory worker, it would be this - never to neglect an extraordinary appearance or happening.”
-Alexander Fleming
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