PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Overcoming a learning disability will make physician-in-training a better doctor

2012-05-08
(Press-News.org) Overcoming a learning disability to become a physician will actually help in being compassionate toward patients, writes a medical student of his struggle with a severe reading disability in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal).

Daniel Heffner, a medical student at the University of British Columbia who will graduate in 2013, has struggled with a severe reading disability that caused laborious reading and poor marks in school until he was diagnosed at age 12. His diagnosis allowed him to realize he could succeed, and he applied himself to overcoming his disability. He triumphed, being admitted to university for science and later, pharmacy and medical school.

"Now as a medical student, I look at things differently," writes Heffner. "When I see the new challenges and struggles my patients face in tackling their new diagnoses, addictions and disabilities, I'm reminded of my personal struggle in tackling my disability. I feel the frustration they feel when their health care goals and challenges are not properly understood by those who care for them, just as my disability was at times not understood by those in charge of my education."

Although Heffner still struggles at learning in a fast-paced environment, his determination keeps him focused.

"What once seemed like such a burden now serves as my greatest asset in being compassionate toward my patients. It makes me human."

INFORMATION:

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Best websites balance self-expression and functionality

2012-05-08
Giving people the freedom -- but not too much freedom -- to express themselves may help designers build more interactive web portals and online communities, according to Penn State researchers. The researchers found that people increased their interactivity and developed a greater sense of community when they could write their own blog posts, change the look of their site and add gadgets, such as weather and news feeds, to personalized websites or portals. However, the researchers noted that interactivity and satisfaction dropped if participants had the option to choose ...

Gaseous emissions from dinosaurs may have warmed prehistoric earth

2012-05-08
Sauropod dinosaurs could in principle have produced enough of the greenhouse gas methane to warm the climate many millions of years ago, at a time when the Earth was warm and wet. That's according to calculations reported in the May 8th issue of Current Biology, a Cell Press publication. The hulking sauropods, distinctive for their enormous size and unusually long necks, were widespread about 150 million years ago. As in cows, methane-producing microbes aided the sauropods' digestion by fermenting their plant food. "A simple mathematical model suggests that the microbes ...

Annals of Internal Medicine tip sheet for May 8, 2012, online issue

2012-05-08
1. Evidence Review: Screening Women for Intimate Partner Violence May Have Benefits, Few Harms Intimate partner violence, or IPV, includes a range of abusive behaviors perpetrated by someone who is in an intimate relationship with the victim. Abusive behaviors may include physical violence, sexual violence, rape, and psychological aggression – all of which have immediate health effects on the victim. While victims and perpetrators can be male or female, women are disproportionately victimized (up to 5.3 million women are affected each year in the U.S.). In 2004, the ...

Genetic abnormalities in benign or malignant tissues predict relapse of prostate cancer

2012-05-08
Philadelphia, PA, May 7, 2012 – While active monitoring of serum prostate specific antigen (PSA) levels in men over 50 has greatly improved early detection of prostate cancer, prediction of clinical outcomes after diagnosis remains a major challenge. Researchers from the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine have found that a genetic abnormality known as copy number variation (CNV) in prostate cancer tumors, as well as in the benign prostate tissues adjacent to the tumor and in the blood of patients with prostate cancer, can predict whether a patient will experience ...

New rearing system may aid sterile insect technique against mosquitoes

New rearing system may aid sterile insect technique against mosquitoes
2012-05-08
The requirement for efficient mosquito mass-rearing technology has been one of the major obstacles preventing the large scale application of the Sterile Insect Technique (SIT) against mosquitoes. However, according to a new article in the next issue of the Journal of Medical Entomology, scientists at the Untited Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) have developed a larval rearing unit based on the use of a stainless steel rack that is expected to be able to successfully rear 140,000–175,000 adult mosquitoes ...

Defective carnitine metabolism may play role in autism

2012-05-08
HOUSTON -- (May 7, 2012) – The deletion of part of a gene that plays a role in the synthesis of carnitine – an amino acid derivative that helps the body use fat for energy – may play a role in milder forms of autism, said a group of researchers led by those at Baylor College of Medicine (http://www.bcm.edu) and Texas Children's Hospital (http://www.texaschildrens.org). "This is a novel inborn error of metabolism," said Dr. Arthur Beaudet (http://www.bcm.edu/genetics/index.cfm?pmid=10579), chair of molecular and human genetics at BCM and a physician at Texas Children's ...

Team care of chronic diseases seems cost-effective

Team care of chronic diseases seems cost-effective
2012-05-08
SEATTLE—The collaborative TEAMcare program for people with depression and either diabetes, heart disease, or both appears at least to pay for itself, according to a UW Medicine and Group Health Research Institute report in the May 7 Archives of General Psychiatry. Over two years, after accounting for the $1,224 per patient that the program cost, it may save as much as $594 per patient in outpatient costs. "Also, over the course of two years, people who received the TEAMcare intervention had a mean of 114 more days free from depression than did the people who received ...

Researchers discover gene that leads to severe weight gain with antipsychotic treatment

2012-05-08
Antipsychotic medications are increasingly prescribed in the US, but they can cause serious side effects including rapid weight gain, especially in children. In the first study of its kind, researchers at Zucker Hillside Hospital and the Feinstein Institute for Medical Research identified a gene that increases weight gain in those treated with commonly-used antipsychotic drugs. These findings were published in the May issue of Archives of General Psychiatry. Second-generation antipsychotics (SGAs) were used as the treatment in this study. SGAs are commonly used to treat ...

Delayed female sexual maturity linked to longer lifespan in mice

2012-05-08
An intriguing clue to longevity lurks in the sexual maturation timetable of female mammals, Jackson Laboratory researchers and their collaborators report. Jackson researchers including Research Scientist Rong Yuan, Ph.D., had previously established that mouse strains with lower circulating levels of the hormone IGF1 at age six months live longer than other strains. In research published May 7 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Yuan and colleagues report that females from strains with lower IGF1 levels also reach sexual maturity at a significantly ...

Not all tumor cells are equal: Stanford study reveals huge genetic diversity in cells shed by tumors

2012-05-08
STANFORD, Calif. — The cells that slough off from a cancerous tumor into the bloodstream are a genetically diverse bunch, Stanford University School of Medicine researchers have found. Some have genes turned on that give them the potential to lodge themselves in new places, helping a cancer spread between organs. Others have completely different patterns of gene expression and might be more benign, or less likely to survive in a new tissue. Some cells may even express genes that could predict their response to a specific therapy. Even within one patient, the tumor cells ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Make it worth Weyl: engineering the first semimetallic Weyl quantum crystal

Exercise improves brain function, possibly reducing dementia risk

Diamonds are forever—But not in nanodevices

School-based program for newcomer students boosts mental health, research shows

Adding bridges to stabilize quantum networks

Major uncertainties remain about impact of treatment for gender related distress

Likely 50-fold rise in prevalence of gender related distress from 2011-21 in England

US college graduates live an average of 11 years longer than those who never finish high school

Scientists predict what will be top of the crops in UK by 2080 due to climate change

Study: Physical function of patients at discharge linked to hospital readmission rates

7 schools awarded financial grants to fuel student well-being

NYU Tandon research to improve emergency responses in urban areas with support from NVIDIA

Marcus Freeman named 2024 Paul “Bear” Bryant Coach of the Year

How creating and playing terrific video games can accelerate the battle against cancer

Rooting for resistance: How soybeans tackle nematode invaders is no secret anymore

Beer helps grocery stores tap sales in other categories

New USF study: Surprisingly, pulmonary fibrosis patients with COVID-19 improve

In a landmark study, an NYBG scientist and colleagues find that reforestation stands out among plant-based climate-mitigation strategies as most beneficial for wildlife biodiversity

RSClin® Tool N+ gives more accurate estimates of recurrence risk and individual chemotherapy benefit in node-positive breast cancer

Terahertz pulses induce chirality in a non-chiral crystal

AI judged to be more compassionate than expert crisis responders: Study

Scale-up fabrication of perovskite quantum dots

Adverse childhood experiences influence potentially dangerous firearm-related behavior in adulthood

Bacteria found to eat forever chemicals — and even some of their toxic byproducts

London cabbies’ planning strategies could help inform future of AI

More acidic oceans may affect the sex of oysters

Transportation insecurity in Detroit and beyond

New tool enables phylogenomic analyses of entire genomes

Uncovering the role of Y chromosome genes in male fertility in mice

A single gene underlies male mating morphs in ruff sandpipers

[Press-News.org] Overcoming a learning disability will make physician-in-training a better doctor