Posts Tagged ‘health’

Mar

07

Technologies to help save our healthcare system

Posted by: Michael Alfaro

Found this while posting the last post, 9 Technologies to help bring down the costs of our healthcare systems.  I’ve put a couple the ones I thought were amazing below, but you can read the whole article here.  Some are simple changes to current tech and some are complete revamps, but awesome all around.  Funny thing, I bet you no one will complain that we’re putting a bunch of lab workers or doctors out of jobs with this tech.  But when we try to implement technologies to make local and federal government more efficient and need less workers, everyone goes crazy about job security.

Didn’t mean to go off topic, by NJ is bankrupt but everytime they try to cut people out to save money, it turns into a huge protest and I’m tired to paying some of the highest property taxes in the nation….



Medical Acoustics Lung Flute

“People with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease might be able to scale back on their meds by instead using this $40 reusable instrument (also a PopSci Best of What’s New award winner) that sends vibrations into the lungs to break up mucus. Make sure to check out the video of the Lung Flute in action, starring Senior Associate Editor Bjorn Carey and His Mucus.”



Insulin Made From Flowers

“Americans with diabetes shell out some $132 billion a year for insulin, which usually comes from genetically engineered yeast or bacteria. But Canadian scientists can make it cheaper. They inserted the human insulin gene into the common safflower plant, which churns out the drug for a fraction of the cost. Just 25 square miles of the crop could make insulin for the entire world.”




Feb

25

How to Shovel Snow

Posted by: Michael Alfaro

Seemed pretty relevant after looking outside :) Remember, bend at knees, not the waist…


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Oct

20

Reminding ourselves that we don’t know it all

Posted by: Pinaki Kathiari

So it always a marvel to me how your chest could be opened up and your heart tampered with, and you could be walking the next day. Or how they could send a tube up your thigh and into your brain and you can be fine the next day.

Needless to say the human body has been studied through the ages and we know just about everything there is to know.

Well, not everything. Cracked.com posted an article: 6 Things Your Body Does Every Day That Science Can’t Explain.

I know this has nothing to do with websites, but it reminds me that in our infinite studying of all things there are still things that we haven’t come to understand and the things we do understand can always be questioned.


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Sep

29

Christina Fake talks about working hard from a start up perspective

Posted by: Pinaki Kathiari

Being a business owner and employee who started out in the basement, I’ve learned a lot about what you have to go through. People always say its wonderful to be your own boss, but there is a heavy price to pay for that.

Christina Fake is the co founder of Hunch and former co founder of Flickr. She’s done this a few times. Here is a great article by Christine that delves into working hard vs. working smart.

I’ve seen a lot of hard working entrepreneurs fail, and I’ve come to the conclusion that working hard, while never a bad thing, is not really the magic thing that leads to great inventions or successful outcomes.

Working Hard is Overrated




Sep

21

Smoking ban has positive effect on heart attacks study shows

Posted by: Michael Alfaro

No duh!!!!  First thing I noticed when smoking was banned in public places in New Jersey was that I didn’t smell horrible when I came home from  a bar or lounge.  Of course not being around so much smoke will affect everyone’s health, especially the people sucking in that 2nd hand smoke.   The percentage of heart attacks reduced is very impressive… Can you image how many heart attacks we could stop if we banned Lobbists ???

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“Smoking bans in public places can significantly reduce the number of heart attacks, two U.S. research teams reported on Monday.

One team found smoking bans in the United States, Canada and Europe had an immediate effect that increased over time, cutting heart attacks by 17 percent after the first year and as much as 36 percent after three years, they reported in the journal Circulation.

A second team found such bans reduced the annual heart attack rate by 26 percent. Their report in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology estimates a nationwide ban in the United States could prevent as many as 154,000 heart attacks each year.”

Read Whole Story here


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Sep

17

How much do you use your right temporo-parietal junction?

Posted by: Pinaki Kathiari

The Right Temporo-Parietal Junction, a portion of your brain just above your right ear is the part of your brain that helps us to understand other peoples’ frame of mind.

As UX practicioners, designers, and every developers we are always sensing the motivations and feels of people who will be using the websites we create.

Listen to Rebecca Saxe share fascinating lab work that uncovers how the brain thinks about other peoples’ thoughts — and judges their actions.




Sep

14

Bacteria in showerheads could harm you, who saw this coming

Posted by: Michael Alfaro

I do clean my showerheads every time I clean the shower, but it is amazing how quickly it can build up with if you don’t clean it.  I would never have thought it could be harmful, but it does make sense.  What was really scary was the line that says about showerheads “which blast them into easily inhaled aerosol form.”

Germs in the Shower

“People with normal immune systems have little to fear, but these microbes could be a concern for folks with cystic fibrosis or AIDS, people who are undergoing cancer treatment or those who have had a recent organ transplant.

The researchers offer suggestions for the wary, such as getting all-metal showerheads, which microbes have a harder time clinging to.

Still, showerheads are full of nooks and crannies, making them hard to clean, the researchers note, and the microbes come back even after treatment with bleach.

People who have filtered showerheads could replace the filter weekly, added co-author Laura K. Baumgartner. And, she said, baths don’t splash microbes into the air as much as showers, which blast them into easily inhaled aerosol form.”

Read whole story here


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Aug

06

iPhone app for doctors

Posted by: Pinaki Kathiari

Our good friend Melissa just posted an interesting article about Blackbag, an iPhone app that keeps doctors on the latest greatest in medicine news and therapy.

You might see your doctor using the iPhone on your next visit.


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Aug

03

Wal-Mart making progress on sustainability

Posted by: Pinaki Kathiari

So yea I saw Food, Inc., and yea I saw Wal-Mart in the mix doing its efforts to match their purchasing power with consumers’ demand for green and sustainable products.

So Wal-Mart just released its Sustainability Index.

The idea is to reflect their huge buying power with that of consumer mindset. For instance Wal-Mart stopped selling baby bottles made from Bisphenol-A.

The initiative starts with Wal-Mart sending a pretty in-depth survey of their product. You can only images what will happen next.

Cheer’s to Wal-Mart for making moves in this arena.




Aug

03

Vitamin D, are your kids getting theirs???

Posted by: Michael Alfaro

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I couldn’t believe this when I read it, then I started thinking about how few kids in my neighborhood are even out during the day… and it made sense… Get outside, put the mouse and controllers down!!!!

“A whopping 70 percent of American kids aren’t getting enough vitamin D, and such youngsters tend to have higher blood pressure and lower levels of good cholesterol than their peers, according to two new studies published this week in the journal Pediatrics. Low vitamin D levels also may increase a child’s risk of developing heart disease later in life, experts say.

“We were astounded at how common it was,” says study author Dr. Michal Melamed, an assistant professor of medicine, epidemiology, and population health at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, in the Bronx, New York. “There is a lot of data that suggests adults with low vitamin-D levels are at risk for diabetes, high blood pressure, cardiovascular disease, and a lot of cancers, and if kids start out with low levels and never increase them, they may be putting themselves at risk for developing all of these diseases at a much earlier age.”

Vitamin D is often called the “sunshine vitamin” because the human body makes it only when exposed to sunlight — although it only takes 10 to 15 minutes a day to make an adequate amount. Vitamin D, which helps the bones better absorb calcium, is also added to multivitamins and milk.”

Read whole story here