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Seeing the Difference: A Project on Viewing Death and Dying in Interdi "Artists, humanists, and medical professionals discuss what it means to die in America in the 21st century."Contains transcripts and video of excerpts from a 2000 U.C. Berkeley institute designed to "work toward the conceptualization of new forms of empathy towards those who face imminent death"by sharing perceptions of death across disciplines. Includes links to related sites. From the Doreen B. Townsend Center for the Humanities, University of California, Berkeley. Lung-sparing Treatment For Cancer Proving Effective Indiana University School of Medicine researchers report that patients with early stage non-small cell lung cancer responded well to high doses of radiation administered through extracranial stereotactic body radiation therapy, a lung-sparing procedure. Antifibrinolytic Drugs Reduce Blood Loss During Cardiac Surgery, Study The amount of blood loss that occurs during major complex surgery is limited by the body's ability to form blood clots. Drugs that slow down the rate at which these blood clots are dissolved, called antifibrinolytics, can significantly reduce blood loss, particularly during cardiac surgery, and reduce the need for reoperation because of continued bleeding. One of the effective drugs, tranexamic acid, is quite cheap and is likely to be cost effective, particularly in cardiac surgery. Life-threatening Gene Defect Located: Mutation Linked To Thoracic Aort Scientists have identified a defective gene that affects vascular smooth-muscle cells in people who suffer from hereditary thoracic aortic disease, which can kill victims with little warning in the prime of their lives. [Absurd] Doctor missed 45 stab wounds A doctor called to the death bed of an 87-year-old man failed to notice he had been stabbed 45 times. Flawed Pesticide Studies Using Human Subjects Could Result In Higher A Studies using human subjects to determine a "no observable effect level"of pesticides do not meet widely accepted scientific and ethical standards for research and should not be used to set new standards, according to a scathing analysis published in the November issue of the American Journal of Public Health. The Wiki That Edited Me For over a week, volunteer editors picked at the prose, tested the facts and directed this journalist to new avenues of reporting. But did our experiment in collaborative journalism produce a compelling story? By Ryan Singel. Cigarette Taxes Do Reduce Smoking But Can Lead To Bootlegging, Study S Increasing cigarette taxes is an effective strategy for reducing tobacco use but there may be negative consequences especially in disadvantaged minority communities. According to a study conducted by researchers at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, a dramatic rise in illegal street sales of untaxed cigarettes was reported among minority low-income persons immediately after the price increase that reinforced smoking and undermined cessation efforts. Obesity Is Risk Factor For Aggressive Prostate Cancer Obesity appears to increase the risk of prostate cancer, particularly aggressive disease, and may make it harder to find, researchers say. Smaller prostates also increase the risk of aggressive disease, they say. Normal Tissue Not Spared In New Forms Of Breast Cancer Radiotherapy A five-day course of radiotherapy to treat breast cancer may, in some cases, expose as much lung and heart tissue to potentially toxic radiation as does the standard six weeks of treatment, say researchers.
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