If you're now in engineering, consider
writing about medicine.
Not exact matches
While Gates admits he isn't usually «one for tear - jerkers
about death and dying,» he was drawn to Kalanithi's search for meaning through books,
writing, his family,
medicine, surgery, and science.
«The outcome on November 8 didn't change the fact that many Americans are angry
about the rising cost of healthcare and their
medicines,» he
wrote.
The girl, who experienced a stroke and then subsequent brain damage from the disease and now takes a Horizon
medicine to stabilize the condition, spoke
about how happy she was that country singer Chris Jacobs
wrote a song for her.
Arturo Castiglione
wrote about the overwhelming importance of this biblical medical law: «The laws against leprosyin Leviticus 13 may be regarded as the first model of sanitary legislation» (A History of
Medicine).»
At the same time that I have been
writing about happiness I have also been
writing a book on the suffering and death of children, Naming the Silences: God,
Medicine and the Problem of Suffering.
The medical adviser to the Nuremberg Trials, Dr. Leo Alexander,
wrote about the episode in the New England Journal of
Medicine:
You are such an inspiration to me, I agree 100 % with what you
wrote about food being our
medicine, and the most powerful one, I have doscovered so many new foods thanks to your blog (I simply ADORE quinoa!
I love this story — it's so important that we
write about alternatives to Western
medicine.
A few weeks ago, I
wrote a post
about Food as
Medicine and shared my story of how this blog began as a place to record foods I made for my friends with cancer, as well as my personal journey to help feed my family healthy, delicious and beautiful food.
Consider what Guido Mase
wrote about dandelion in his book The Wild
Medicine Solution: «It keeps waving its little flag for a reason: it is the best medicine for you right now
Medicine Solution: «It keeps waving its little flag for a reason: it is the best
medicine for you right now
medicine for you right now.»
The idea that cannabis (which you might better knows as «marijuana,» but that term has issues) is good for body and soul goes as far back as at least 2900 B.C. when the Chinese emperor Fu Hsi
wrote about it as a «popular
medicine that possessed both yin and yang.»
Writing about head impact sensors in the March 2013 issue of the British Journal of Sports
Medicine, [13] Jeffrey S. Kutcher, MD, of the Department of Neurology and Michigan Neurosport at the University of Michigan, concurs that the «development of easily deployable sport equipment - based accelerometer systems... provide [s][a] potentially useful, clinical information.»
Letters to the editor from Orland Park and Homer Glen residents: Preventive
medicine Many readers have
written letters to the editor
about a recent piece by Tribune columnist John Kass
about doctors asking teens if families have guns.
Li Shizhen first
wrote about placenta as a
medicine in the 1500 ′ s when he compiled the first Materia Medica on Traditional Chinese M
medicine in the 1500 ′ s when he compiled the first Materia Medica on Traditional Chinese
MedicineMedicine.
You can
write down
about your duties,
medicine time, exercise time and so on.
But I delve into the intersection between
medicine, gender, and parenting from time to time — and when I return to school full - time in a few months, I will be
writing more
about medicine and how being a parent changes — or doesn't — my approach to becoming a doctor.
She studied with leading experts in traditional Oriental
medicine and since 1970 has taught, consulted, and
written about the healing properties of whole foods and how to achieve a sustainable and healthy diet.
Because they experience a growth spurt during this period, they should aim to get
about 200 milligrams more calcium, or «between 1,000 and 1,100» milligrams, said Dr. Steven A. Abrams, a professor of pediatrics at Baylor College of
Medicine who specializes in the calcium intake of children and was one of the panelists who
wrote the IOM report.
However, I do recall a few epidemiologists pointing out the flaws in * your * criticisms when you
wrote a post
about it on Science Based
Medicine.
«That's one of those myths,» explains Clay Jones, a pediatric and newborn hospitalist at Newton - Wellesley Hospital in Newton, Massachusetts, who
wrote about teething for the popular blog Science - Based
Medicine.
Martin Enserink Contributing Editor, Europe Edits European news coverage and
writes about biology,
medicine, and science policy, with an emphasis on infectious diseases and global health.
Instead of telling her own story, in Finding the Way Back to a First (Career) Love, Webb
writes about Sandeep Jauhar, a cardiologist and medical journalist who earned a Ph.D. in physics before turning to
medicine.
► As part of a series of articles
about fighting malaria in this week's issue, Leslie Roberts
wrote about Myaing Myaing Nyunt, an assistant professor at the University of Maryland School of
Medicine in Baltimore who leads «a unique collaboration [with] her husband, molecular epidemiologist and malariologist Chris Plowe.
I read and
wrote about mathematics, ecology,
medicine, biochemistry, psychology, science policy — a range of topics I would never have had time to explore during a regular semester in graduate school.
Daniel Grushkin
writes about science and technology for Businessweek, Nature
Medicine and other publications.
Dina Fine Maron is an award - winning associate editor who
writes about health,
medicine and biology for Scientific American.
He has
written a book
about neural prosthetics entitled Shattered Nerves: How Science Is Solving Modern
Medicine's Most Perplexing Problem, to be published by Johns Hopkins University Press this fall.
The danger of pseudoscience and quackery is very real, says Jeffrey I. Mechanick, an endocrinologist at the Mount Sinai School of
Medicine who has
written extensively
about the use of dietary supplements in the treatment of diabetes and other metabolic diseases.
The contest involves
writing a 500 - word essay in English, or 1,500 characters in Japanese,
about translational
medicine, which is a relatively new scientific field where human health is promoted by facilitating communication among those dedicated to basic and clinical research and its application.
Zimmer has
written 13 books
about biology and
medicine and hundreds of features for magazines such as The Atlantic, National Geographic, Scientific American and The New York Times Magazine.
In an editorial also published in the July 1 issue of Annals of Internal
Medicine, Dr. George Sawaya and Dr. Vanessa Jacoby of the Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences at the University of California, San Francisco
write, «The pelvic examination has held a prominent place in women's health for many decades and has come to be more of a ritual than an evidence - based practice... With the current state of evidence, clinicians who continue to offer the examination should at least be cognizant
about the uncertainty of its benefits and its potential to cause harm through false - positive testing and the cascade of events it prompts.»
Donna Dickenson
writes about the threat to communal health measures posed by the growing demand to fund personalised
medicine (14...
What I most enjoyed
about my studies was explaining exactly what I was doing in plain language, for example,
writing a lucid dissertation
about new
medicines to combat AIDS.
While freely available to all journalists, SciLine is designed to be particularly useful to reporters in small and medium media markets who are
writing or producing stories
about health,
medicine or science and may not have deep science backgrounds or immediate access to credible experts.
In an accompanying editorial, Steven J. Keteyian, Ph.D., and Clinton A. Brawner, Ph.D., of the Division of Cardiovascular
Medicine at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit,
wrote, «We are reminded that we still know relatively little
about how variations in physical activity and exercise «dose» might impact disease onset.»
Although Baillargeon will not speculate
about why primary care physicians are more likely to
write a prescription without first ordering a blood test, Glenn Cunningham, a professor of
medicine and an endocrinologist at the Baylor College of Medicine, suggests that perhaps the generalists are less familiar with the Endocrine Society's gui
medicine and an endocrinologist at the Baylor College of
Medicine, suggests that perhaps the generalists are less familiar with the Endocrine Society's gui
Medicine, suggests that perhaps the generalists are less familiar with the Endocrine Society's guidelines.
I'm sure you could find an animal behaviorist to
write an interesting article
about how animals will take «
medicines» when they are ill (i.e., how some animals will seek out particular plants to eat just for their medicinal value).
In a related editorial, Aaron E. Carroll, M.D., M.S., of the Indiana University School of
Medicine, Indianapolis,
writes: «Their findings are not surprising, given our prior knowledge
about cost sharing.»
In an accompanying editorial, Andrew M. Prentice, Ph.D., of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical
Medicine, and colleagues
write that the increase seen in this study in hospital admissions among the iron supplementation group, which by definition constitutes a potentially serious adverse event, adds to the concerns
about the safety of iron administration in highly malaria - endemic environments.
Deepak Srivastava
writes about how by helping cells switch their type, we may have discovered a new way to repair damaged hearts, and potentially revolutionize the future of
medicine.
A number of professional journalists and other notables have
written frequently
about healthy life extension and related topics, such as stem cell research, regenerative
medicine, aging research, life extension politics, and so forth.
I
write about science,
medicine, and the environment, translating complex concepts into words that inform, educate, and inspire.
Kristen Moore lives in the greater Seattle area where she
writes about herbs, natural foods and products, and alternative
medicine at Spiceoflifeblog.com.
He cared
about practicing
medicine and
writing, so that is what he did in his final days.
I coined this term back when I first began
writing about autoimmunity, and now it's become the established term in functional
medicine to explain how autoimmune conditions develop and, more importantly, how to reverse them.
Now she combines raising her two little boys on Sydney's Northern Beaches with
writing about science, health and
medicine, and blogging
about neuroscience.
As I
write about in Mind Over
Medicine, anxiety can start as a feeling in your mind that translates into the physiology of your body and predisposes you to diseases like heart disease.
Taming my flu fears
Writing about natural
medicine for a living does nt give me immunity against having a few of my own flu fears.
The new findings bolster evidence that it matters less what particular diet composition people follow and more whether a person sticks with that diet, said Linda Van Horn, a professor of preventive
medicine at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago, who wrote an editorial about the ne
medicine at Northwestern University Feinberg School of
Medicine in Chicago, who wrote an editorial about the ne
Medicine in Chicago, who
wrote an editorial
about the new study.