Popular Articles

Popular Television Shows Inaccurately Portray Violent Crime According To Mayo Clinic Researchers
Researchers at Mayo Clinic compared two popular television shows, CSI and CSI: Miami, to actual U.S. homicide data, and discovered clear differences between media portrayals of violent deaths versus actual murders. This study complements previous research regarding media influences on public health perception. Mayo Clinic researchers presented their findings at the American Psychiatric Association annual meeting in San Francisco.
generic viagra
1.02B Chronically Hungry People Worldwide, U.N. Says
For the first time, the number of chronically hungry people worldwide is greater than 1 billion, according to a recent U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) statement, the Financial Times reports (Blas, Financial Times, 6/19). The total number of hungry people is estimated to have reached 1.02 billion - an increase of 11 percent from last year"s 915 million, according to the agency, which based its estimate on analysis by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (Rizzo, AP/Google.com, 6/20).
News of the day
Proposed California Budget Cuts To State HIV/AIDS Programs Will 'Cost Lives', Opinion Piece Says
"California will not be saving money," in its proposal to cut funding from HIV/AIDS programs, including the state AIDS Drug Assistance Program, Ken Owens, member of the Inland Empire HIV Planning Council and former member of the Desert AIDS Client Committee, writes in a Desert Sun opinion piece. He adds, "Instead, it will have more people looking for places to live and needing more state services because they are sick, need welfare funds and state healthcare." Owens continues, "Their plan of balancing the budget will surely cost lives if HIV/AIDS funding is cut" (Owens, Desert Sun, 6/18).
Public Health

Video Games Are Helping Doctors View The Body - Using The Nintendo Wii To Interpret Radiology Exams

The popular Nintendo Wii videogame system is helping radiology students reach new levels! Faculty from Weill Cornell Medical College have coupled the motion-sensitive Wii remote with the same computers used to analyze scans, and have found that the Wii remote makes examining CT and MRI images more ergonomic, heightens the interactivity during classes, and may potentially improve the ability to interpret scans. "The remote is very intuitive -- cycling through the scans is a matter of rotating your wrist," explains Dr. George Shih, a radiologist at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center and assistant professor of radiology at Weill Cornell Medical College, who, along with his colleagues, helped develop the system that links the Wii remote to the diagnostic computer. Their research was presented recently at the 2009 American Roentgen Ray Society (ARRS) Annual Meeting in Boston, Mass. Traditionally, radiologists might spend hours at a time, with only short breaks, reading scans using a typical mouse and keyboard. Many of the movements are repetitive and require precise mouse-clicking and scrolling, which can be taxing on the body and may lead to repetitive motion injuries such as carpal tunnel syndrome. "The easiest way to avoid injury is to change positions," says Dr. Shih, and that is exactly what using the Wii remote allows. By simply holding the remote in their hand and rotating their wrist, radiologists can gradually inspect the scans, while sitting in any position they find most comfortable. Dr. Shih demonstrated that a person using the remote could sit back and relax in his seat, with his arms draped to the sides, and still maintain the same ability to interpret scans as compared to rigidly sitting at a desk using a mouse and keyboard. Within the remote lies a device that measures 3-D motion, called an accelerometer, which allows the user to advance through the scan with simple movements. "We are not currently using the Wii remote in actual clinical diagnosis," says Dr. Shih, "but we"re hoping to show that it can become an alternative that is at least as accurate as using a traditional keyboard and mouse." Currently, the Wii is being used in radiology courses at Weill Cornell as a tool for teaching students. Since the Wii remote is wireless, with a wide range, instructors can hand the controller to students sitting in the lecture hall to scan images themselves. He says this boosts the class" interactivity, allowing the students to interpret scans rather than simply observe the instructor. "It"s exciting to see faculty members creating innovative tools to push the boundaries of not only education, but also technology that has the potential to change the entire field of radiology," says Dr. Robert Min, radiologist-in-chief at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center and the chairman of radiology at Weill Cornell Medical College. To create the device, Dr. Shih collaborated with a longtime friend and colleague Dr. Michael Brown, and with Lu Zheng from School of Computing at the National University of Singapore. Drs. Matthew Amans and Cliff Yeh, radiology residents at Weill Cornell, were also involved in the development and design of the system. Weill Cornell Medical College


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):