Current Events in Medicine (healthcare) and Science THREAD

JPodel

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I have yet to see a thread dedicated to sharing and discussing current events in healthcare and science. Please feel free to post articles on CURRENT (not old) events that seem pretty interesting in healthcare and science. Try to keep it medicine related! I usually wake up and try to read at least 2 articles on current events that are healthcare related not only to better reading skills, but to know what is going on! I will post stuff daily. Fire away! 👍
 
To start his thread off.

Human Scabs Serve as Inspiration for New Bandage to Speed Healing:

May 29, 2013 — Human scabs have become the model for development of an advanced wound dressing material that shows promise for speeding the healing process, scientists are reporting.

Their study appears in the journal ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces.
Shutao Wang and colleagues explain that scabs are a perfect natural dressing material for wounds. In addition to preventing further bleeding, scabs protect against infection and recruit the new cells needed for healing. Existing bandages and other dressings for wounds generally are intended to prevent bleeding and infections. Wang's team set out to develop a new generation of wound dressings that reduce the risk of infections while speeding the healing process.
They describe how research on the surface structure of natural scabs served as inspiration for developing a "cytophilic" wound dressing material. It attracts new cells needed for healing. The material mimics the underside of scabs, where tiny fibers are arranged in the same direction like velvet or a cat's fur. Wang's team spun fibers of polyurethane -- the common durable and flexible plastic -- into the same pattern. In laboratory experiments, the human cells involved in healing quickly attached to the membrane and lined up like those in actual scabs. The scientists conclude that this membrane "is of great potential in fabricating dressing materials for rapid wound healing, as well as other biomaterials, such as membrane for capturing circulating tumor cells, bone growth and constructing neural networks."
The authors acknowledge funding from the National Research Fund for Fundamental Key Projects, the National Natural Science Foundation, the Key Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the China Postdoctoral Science Foundation.
 
I remember starting a thread like this once. It was great... until HE ruined it...
 
I have yet to see a thread dedicated to sharing and discussing current events in healthcare and science. Please feel free to post articles on CURRENT (not old) events that seem pretty interesting in healthcare and science. Try to keep it medicine related! I usually wake up and try to read at least 2 articles on current events that are healthcare related not only to better reading skills, but to know what is going on! I will post stuff daily. Fire away! 👍

I find the Onion quite good at recent healthcare articles
 
See my signature.
Just looked over that thread and all I can say is DAMN. I hate talking about politics especially in healthcare because "geniuses" are never willing to surrender their thoughts to take a different perspective on anything else.

Hey, at least you got a mad hater to make a signature for you!
 
Oh nos.

http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/805003

HILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania — Let the intensivist attendings and fellows go home. Their presence at night in a tertiary care intensive care unit (ICU) does not have any measurable benefit on patient outcomes, a randomized controlled trial shows.

One third of academic medical centers have implemented nighttime staffing with intensivists, but outcomes studies using before-and-after or crossover designs have produced mixed results.

And this. http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/804583

The financial cost of stroke is projected to more than double by 2030, primarily because of the aging of the population, according to a new policy statement issued by the American Heart Association and the American Stroke Association.

The statement, published online in Stroke on May 22, calls for greater awareness of this "looming crisis" by policymakers at all levels of governance so that practical ways to avert it can be considered.
 
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