Monthly Archives: January 2014

Will Turkey be the next medical tourism giant?

turkish medical tourism

Will Turkey be the next medical tourism giant?

Yeni Safak, the conservative turkish newspaper reported – Turkey’s rise in world health tourism will double the revenue the country makes from treating foreign patients in 2014, according to Minister of Health, Mehmet Muezzinoglu. “Russians and citizens of the Turkic republics top the list of foreign patients who prefer Turkey. We aim to double this year’s USD 2.5 billion medical tourism income in 2014”, Muezzinoglu said, assessing his Ministry’s yearly performance.

“Beginning in 2014, two successive 5-year plans will be put into action to further improve Turkey’s status as a regional healthcare hub that can serve the surrounding region of about a billion people”, Turkey’s Minister of Health noted. Hosting a large number of world-class healthcare facilities and internationally accredited hospitals, Turkey welcomed some 270,000 foreign patients seeking high-quality and affordable treatment in 2012, up from 74,000 in 2008. Planning to introduce tax-free healthcare zones specifically tailored for foreign patients, Turkey’s Ministry of Health intends to increase the number of medical tourists to 500,000 by 2015 and 2 million by 2023.

turkey_500x230

Why Turkey?

  • Turkey has the highest number of JCI accredited healthcare institutions in the world.
  • Turkey is presently recognized as a competitive and high technology healthcare destination treating thousands of foreign patients from Europe and neighboring countries every month.
  • Close to 60 internationally competitive medical faculties training thousands of Turkish and foreign medical students and high certification standards for physicians ensure successful medical results in a wide variety of specialties.
  • Culturally vibrant atmosphere in metropolitan Turkish cities provide a friendly and safe environment for patients and spouses to fully recuperate.
  • The incredibly central geographical location of Turkey at a crossroad between Europe and Asia allow for easy access and short flying times to every destination in the world.
  • Turkey is an EU candidate country currently fulfilling membership criteria ensuring high and consistent standards in healthcare.
  • Reliable quotes and consistent prices are the norm.
  • All accredited Turkish hospitals are outfitted with world-class infrastructure and modern technology.
  • Almost all major pharmaceutical companies such as Pfizer, GlaxoSmithKline, Johnson and Johnson, Sanofi-Aventis, Merck, Novartis, Roche, Astra Zeneca are present in Turkey with regional headquarters and manufacturing facilities as well as many local manufacturers.

Reliable supply of blood is provided by Kızılay (the Turkish Red Crescent) which is a JCI accredited organization.

Turkey is one of the world’s top 10 medical tourism destinations, welcoming more than three hundred thousand health tourist every year. Also it’s modern enough to be comfortable yet traditional enough to be interesting.

Pin ItFollow Me on Pinterest

University of Leicester study finds walking 20 minutes per day can reduce health risks

nordic_walking

University of Leicester study finds walking 20 minutes per day can reduce health risks

An increase of just 2000 steps a day cuts cardiovascular disease risk by 8% in those with a high risk of type 2 diabetes

A large international study of people with impaired glucose tolerance (IGT; a precursor to diabetes) has found that every additional 2000 steps taken a day over one year—roughly equivalent to 20 min a day of moderately-paced walking—reduces the risk of cardiovascular events such as heart attack and stroke by 8%.

“People with IGT have a greatly increased risk of cardiovascular disease”, explains study leader Dr Thomas Yates from the University of Leicester in the UK in The Lancet. “While several studies have suggested that physical activity is beneficially linked to health in those with IGT, this is the first study to specifically quantify the extent to which change in walking behaviour can modify the risk of heart disease, stroke, and cardiovascular-related deaths.”*

IGT affects about 7.9% of the adult population (344 million people worldwide), and this number is projected to increase to 472 million (8.4%) by 2030.

Data on 9306 adults from 40 countries with IGT and cardiovascular disease or at least one cardiovascular risk factor were taken from the NAVIGATOR trial**. All participants received a lifestyle modification programme aimed at reducing body weight and dietary fat intake while increasing physical activity to 150min a week. Using a pedometer, researchers recorded usual walking activity (average number of steps taken per day) over a week both at the start of the study and again 12 months later.

Statistical modelling was used to test the relationship between the number of steps taken per day and the risk of subsequent cardiovascular disease after adjusting for a wide range of confounding factors such as body-mass index, smoking status, diet, clinical history, and medication use. 531 cardiovascular events were recorded during 45 211 person-years of follow-up.

Both levels of walking activity at the start of the study and change in walking activity over 12 months had a graded inverse association with subsequent risk of cardiovascular disease.

Specifically, for every 2000 steps per day difference in walking activity at the start of the study there was a 10% difference in the risk of cardiovascular disease in subsequent years. On top of this, the risk of cardiovascular disease was further modified by 8% for every 2000 steps per day that walking activity changed between the start of the study and 12 months later.

For example, if subject A took 4000 steps per day at the start of the study and did not change their activity levels over the next 12 months, and subject B took 6000 steps per day at the start of the study and increased their activity levels to 8000 steps per day over the next 12 months, by the end of the study (other things being equal) subject B would have an 18% lower risk of cardiovascular disease.

According to Yates, “Our results provide novel evidence that changing physical activity levels through simply increasing the number of steps taken can substantially reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease, such as heart attack and stroke. Importantly, these benefits are seen regardless of bodyweight status or the starting level of activity. These novel findings provide the strongest evidence yet for the importance of physical activity in high risk populations and will inform diabetes and cardiovascular disease prevention programmes worldwide.”*

Writing in a linked Comment, Giuseppe Pugliese and Stefano Balducci from La Sapienza University in Rome, Italy say, “The results from the NAVIGATOR add compelling and reassuring evidence on the benefits of physical activity on cardiovascular health, though there is the need for further observational and intervention studies with rigorous and objective assessment of physical activity and fitness.”

Ends

Notes to Editors:
*Quotes direct from author and cannot be found in text of Article.

**The NAVIGATOR trial tested whether treatments for diabetes and blood pressure could also prevent the onset of diabetes and cardiovascular events in patients aged 50 or more who had impaired glucose tolerance and cardiovascular risk factors or cardiovascular disease. Researchers analyzed data from 9306 adults from 806 centres in 40 countries who were randomised to the anti-hypertensive drug valsartan, the blood sugar lowering drug nateglinid, or placebo, and were tracked for an average of 6 years.

Dr Thomas Yates, Diabetes Research Unit, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK. E)   Dr Giuseppe Pugliese, La Sapienza University, Rome, Italy,  E) 

For full Article and Comment:

http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(13)62061-9/abstract

Pin ItFollow Me on Pinterest

3D sonograms let blind expectant parents “see” their babies

seeBaby

3D sonograms let blind expectant parents “see” their babies

Jorge Roberto Lopes dos Santos, an industrial designer with the Instituto Nacional de Tecnologia in Brazil, is giving doctors a new way to print sonograms for their patients — as life-size replicas. The prenatal sonogram is a life-changing moment for many expectant parents, giving rise to the inherent value these images hold whether as printouts passed among family members or posts on social media. It’s one of the joyous benchmarks of pregnancy, but one that has been elusive to the visually impaired. Innovations in 3D printing, however, could change that.

Dos Santos’s company, Tecnologia Humana 3D, has been developing new ways to build three-dimensional computer models using data from sonograms and other imaging techniques after initially setting out to enhance prenatal diagnostic tools. The work took a new direction when dos Santos realized that printing these models would give visually impaired mothers-to-be a chance to meet their babies in utero. “We work mainly to help physicians when there is some eventual possibility of malformation,” dos Santos said. “We also work for parents who want to have the models of their fetuses in 3D.”

seebabyillustr

Tecnologia Humana designs the models with sophisticated programs that produce highly detailed simulations of a fetus’ anatomy that doctors can examine virtually. They can swoop through the lungs and explore the cavities of the heart in search of problems that may require intervention. Prior journeys have found Down syndrome and cleft lip, dos Santos said in a recent paper. Making a tangible model of a fetus requires one other step — plugging that data into a 3D printer, a device that can create objects by laying down successive layers of material.

Neva Fairchild, the resident expert on independent living at the American Foundation for the Blind, said the models would also benefit visually impaired family members looking to share in the experience of seeing their loved one’s unborn child for the first time.

A model would allow people with impaired vision to know the size of a fetus while giving them a new appreciation of those tiny toes and fingers. Fairchild, who is legally blind and can only discern shapes and shadows, speaks from experience. “Fifteen months ago, my first grandchild was born and they had numerous sonograms and I missed out on all of that,” she said.

 

seeBaby

Fairchild said it’s important, however, for the producers of these models to keep cost in mind. Many recent inventions designed to aid the visually impaired are too expensive for the people they’re meant to help, and most insurance policies are reluctant to cover these kinds of expenses, she said.

But dos Santos said his reliance on common imaging techniques, such as the MRI and the CT scan, keeps costs relatively low — about $200 for a full model of a fetus at 12 weeks, and about $300 for the face and arms of a fetus at 24 weeks.

http://io9.com/3d-sonograms-let-blind-expectant-parents-see-their-ba-472999403

Pin ItFollow Me on Pinterest

Croatia charges hundreds in drugs firm corruption probe

Prescribed drugs

Croatia charges hundreds in drugs firm corruption probe

The authorities in Croatia have charged a pharmaceutical company and 364 people – most of them reportedly doctors – for allegedly rigging the drugs market. Senior managers at the drugs firm Farmal bribed a network of doctors and pharmacists to prescribe the company’s products, officials said. They have been charged with bribery, abuse of power and corruption.

Local media said the indictment was the biggest of its kind in the country’s judicial history.  Correspondents say the health system could have collapsed if all the doctors implicated were sacked. There are around 5,000 doctors in Croatia. Many of those charged were given probation fines as a result, local media reported.

In a statement, Croatia’s anti-corruption agency Uskok said the top management of Farmal, based in the northern town of Ludbreg, was charged with bribing “medical workers,” mostly primary care doctors and pharmacists, to “order and prescribe drugs produced” by the company. ”The charges are brought up against 364 Croatian citizens and Farmal pharmaceutical company for bribery, abuse of power and corruption,” it said. The agency did not specify how many doctors have been charged, but local media reported that some 300 doctors have been indicted, according to AFP. The suspects face up to five years’ imprisonment if convicted, the news agency said. Doctors and pharmacists were offered bribes, including money and travel, worth between 5-10% of the medicines they prescribed, according to Sofia News Agency.

The crimes allegedly took place between 2009 and 2012. The date for the trial has yet to be set. Croatia has previously struggled with a widespread corruption problem but became a member of the European Union in July after introducing a series of reforms.

Pin ItFollow Me on Pinterest

Medical Students Head to Eastern Europe

10044948-group-of-medical-students-in-laboratory

Medical Students Head to Eastern Europe

When a first-year medical student from the United States left his skateboard by the entrance of a 19th-century lecture hall here, Professor Andrea Dorottya Szekely swiftly picked it up and reprimanded its young owner, The New York Times reports.

semmelweis_egyetem

“We do things differently here,” Dr. Szekely said of Semmelweis University, a 244-year-old institution in Budapest that focuses on the medical and health sciences. Students are expected to stand at attention in classrooms until a bell rings and their professors enter, for example.

The New York Times said, despite having to bridge such cultural gaps at times, an increasing number of foreign students are heading to Eastern Europe for medical, dental or pharmaceutical studies. Though it still hosts far fewer international students than Western Europe does, the region appears to be attracting growing interest.

The number of foreign university students in Hungary rose 21 percent from 2005 to 2011 — to 16,465 from 13,601 — according to the Unesco Institute for Statistics, which defines a foreign university student as one who had not previously earned a secondary degree in the country. In Poland, there was an 80 percent increase in the number of foreign students from 2005 to 2010, the latest year for which figures are available. The Czech Republic reported a doubling of foreign students from 2005 to 2011, while Slovakia saw a more than fivefold increase in its foreign student population, according to Unesco.

Many of the foreign students who choose the region do so to study medicine or other health care disciplines. In 2010, the fields of “health and welfare” accounted for 30 percent of foreign student enrollment in Poland, according to a study by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. In Slovakia, 45 percent of foreign students were studying health subjects, while in Poland foreigners made up 15 percent of students in those classes, according to the O.E.C.D. study. In comparison, in countries like Germany, Sweden and Canada, where the competition for spots in medical school is especially intense, 6 to 9 percent of students pursuing those degrees are foreigners, according to that study.

In Hungary, where four universities offer medical and dental programs in English, 42 percent of international students are studying in health-related fields, according to the O.E.C.D.

The New York Times underlined, there are various reasons for the shift, including the growing reputation of degrees from Eastern European universities that teach courses in English. But other factors also come into play, particularly the facts that tuition at these institutions is not as expensive as at top Western schools and that they are not as difficult to get into.

The rest of the article can be read HERE.

- See more at: http://dailynewshungary.com/medical-students-head-to-eastern-europe/#sthash.WH1jpDff.dpuf

Pin ItFollow Me on Pinterest

Ministers to charge migrants for NHS services

NHS par sign

Ministers to charge migrants for NHS services

MINISTERS have been warned that plans to charge “health tourists” for NHS services could leave the most vulnerable in our society at risk.

Under the proposed changes, migrants and overseas visitors will have to pay for primary care such as minor surgery carried out by GPs. But critics believe this could prevent Brits living in poverty taking their children to a doctor when they need it. Lucy Jones, manager of Doctors Of The World’s clinic in east London, said: “More barriers will only make it harder for the most vulnerable to access vital healthcare, including pregnant women who could be too frightened to go to A&E. ”We are particularly concerned about the impact on children. Parents may feel unable to take their sick child to A&E because of fears they won’t be able to pay. ”Doctors and nurses should be focusing on treating the sick, not checking everyone’s status to see whether they should be charged.”

The new charges come amid fears that the ending of restrictions on migrants from Bulgaria and Romania on January 1 will see a major influx of immigrants, putting additional strain on the NHS and other public services. The move is part of an extension of the NHS charging regime in England intended to deter so-called “health tourism”. No one will be turned away from an A&E department in an emergency, but there will be a bill to pay afterwards for those from overseas. Consultations with GPs and nurses will remain free of charge to prevent public health risks such as TB, HIV and sexually transmitted infections. Details of the scheme are still being worked out, and ministers say they will publish a full implementation plan in March.

Health Minister Lord Howe said: “Having a universal health service free at the point of use rightly makes us the envy of the world, but we must make sure the system is fair to the hard-working British taxpayers who fund it. ”We know that we need to make changes across the NHS to better identify and charge visitors and migrants. Introducing charging at primary care is the first step to achieving this.” But some believe the focus on immigration will stop GP’s being able to do their job properly.

Dr Helen Stokes-Lampard, spokeswoman for the Royal College of General Practitioners, said: “We still need reassurances that GPs are not going to be pressed into acting as an arm of the Border Agency and we remain unconvinced that the proposals will work across the NHS. ”GPs have a duty of care to all people seeking healthcare and cannot be expected to police the system or prevent people from getting medical help when they are at their most vulnerable. ”We must be allowed to get on with our proper job of caring for patients, not form-filling and acting as a quasi form of immigration control.”

Pin ItFollow Me on Pinterest

Hungarian drugmaker Richter bought a 70 percent stake in Mexican DNA Pharmaceuticals

KONICA MINOLTA DIGITAL CAMERA

Hungarian drugmaker Richter bought a 70 percent stake in Mexican  DNA Pharmaceuticals

Hungarian drugmaker Richter said it bought a 70 percent stake in Mexican marketing partner DNA Pharmaceuticals for about $10 million, as the company expands its presence in the fast-growing Latin American market.

As a result of the acquisition, Richter will hold an initial 70% stake in the Mexican company and will buy the remaining 30% in the next three years, Richter said in a release.

Financial terms weren’t disclosed.

Richter wants to use the Mexican firm for the registration of specialty products in the female healthcare therapeutic area, focusing primarily on Esmya, Richter’s drug to treat uterine fibroids, and the establishment of a related sales network. Following the purchase, the Mexican firm will be renamed Gedeon Richter Mexico S.A.P.I. de C.V.

The acquisition came on the heels of Richter announcing Monday that it had bought an initial majority stake in privately owned Brazilian drug distribution firm Next Pharma Representacao.

“Subsequent to the recently announced acquisition in Brazil, this cooperation with DNA is another strategic move aimed at the diversification of Richter’s geographic presence in Latin America, one of the regions with fastest growing pharmaceutical markets worldwide,” Richter chef executive Erik Bogsch said in the release.

Richter, a major drug maker in central and Eastern Europe, is already expanding in Western Europe and has a strong presence in Russia. Its product portfolio covers almost all major therapeutic areas, including gynecology, the central nervous system and cardiovascular system. In 2012, its consolidated sales totaled about $1.5 billion and its market capitalization was $3.1 billion.

Pin ItFollow Me on Pinterest

Healthcare Data of 840,000 at Risk After Laptop Theft

stolen-macbook

Healthcare Data of 840,000 at Risk After Laptop Theft

Thieves stole two laptops that may contain the unprotected personal data of around 840,000 customers from Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield after breaking into the company’s Newark, N.J. headquarters on Nov. 1. One month later, the company began sending letters to its subscribers notifying them of the breach. Horizon issued a statement on Dec. 6 saying the stolen laptops were password protected, but the internal data was not encrypted. Due to the way the stolen laptops were configured, we are not certain that all of the member information contained on the laptops is accessible. We have no reason to believe that the laptops were stolen for the information they contained or that the information has been accessed or used in any way.

The two stolen laptops, which reportedly were MacBook Pros, were cable-locked to the employees’ workstations, but the thieves somehow broke the locks.

The company believes the laptops could have contained the personal information, including names, dates of birth, “limited clinical information” and social security numbers, according to The Star-Ledger. Company employers discovered the theft on Nov. 4 and immediately notified the police. There have been no arrests, and the thieves have not been identified. Thomas Vincz, a Horizon spokesperson, told SC Magazine that the company will provide free credit monitoring and identity theft protection to the affected subscribers. In a letter sent to a subscriber, who then shared it with Mashable, the company offers a one-year membership to Experian ProtectMyID Alert, an identity theft alert service, which normally costs $15.95 per month. There are multiple potential dangers for the victims if the thieves were to get their hands on the subscribers’ medical records, experts warn.

“Medical data is rife with clues which reveal other details about one’s personal life such as eating, fitness and lifestyle habits and perhaps some genetic resident diseases,” Carl Herberger, vice president of Security Solutions at Radware wrote in a blog post. “This provides a somewhat unique attribute for those who are interested in causing directed harm against a fellow person.” The thieves, Herberger explained, could impersonate the victims and access their medical insurance payments, sell their information or directly blackmail them — a technique that could particularly be effective against celebrities or people in a public positions, such as judges or high-ranking officials.

 

http://mashable.com/2013/12/19/horizon-blue-cross-blue-shield-laptop-theft/

Pin ItFollow Me on Pinterest

Smaller Than Your Phone, This Device Could Keep You Healthy

tellspec_truffle

Smaller Than Your Phone, This Device Could Keep You Healthy

Isabel Hoffmann‘s daughter fell sick after the family moved to the U.S. from Europe. The 14-year-old’s illness got progressively worse — hives, low blood pressure, tremors and light sensitivity — to the point that she had to drop out of school. To make matters worse, no doctor could determine what was causing the chronic illness.

Hoffmann, a serial entrepreneur who helped launch a preventive health clinic in 2001, took matters into her own hands. She brought her daughter to Dr. Neil Nathan, of Gordon Medical Associates in Santa Rosa, Calif., who’d written a book called, On Hope and Healing: For Those Who Have Fallen Through the Medical Cracks.

Dr. Nathan diagnosed Hoffmann’s daughter with mold toxicity, likely Aspergillus Penicillium, which causes severe allergic reactions and sensitivity to gluten, dioxins and other allergens. “He was dead right,” says Hoffmann. “We went back home and tested the house and learned we had high doses of Aspergillus and Penicillium mold in the bedroom.”

It had taken more than a year for Hoffmann to hear a proper diagnosis and learn the empowering information that could help her daughter get better. The family moved to a mold-free environment and the teenager started a new diet; symptoms vanished, she went back to school and her grades skyrocketed.

“That’s when I thought, “Oh my God, how many people go through life suffering so much? And almost giving up — with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome or Fibromyalgia — and resigning themselves to what they have, without a hope to be better?” says Hoffmann.

Hoffmann put her entrepreneurial skills to work, creating a handheld tool to help people like her daughter better understand their environments and the foods they’re consuming and how they affect the body.

This tool, she decided, “should be able to point at food and tell what food it is — if it has gluten, if it has dioxins — or point at the wall to see if the wall has mold and, if so, what kind. Point at the air we breathe and see if it has pollution, and so on,” says Hoffmann. Her friend Stephen Watson told her, “That sounds like Star Trek — I don’t think that’s a reality possible today.”

But it was, and today, Watson and Hoffmann are business partners on a biotech product calledTellSpec, a spectrometer that can parse the ingredients of whatever you point it at and beam this information to an accompanying smartphone app.

Have an allergy to soy? Are you lactose-intolerant? Do you break out in hives after consuming aspartame? Scanning foods with TellSpec will uncover the hidden ingredients and tip you off to any potential health issues it may cause. Do you have a physical reaction when you eat certain foods, but you’re not sure what’s causing it? Logging your symptoms after scanning food will help TellSpec determine what the culprit ingredient might be.

“If you report to us that every time you have some milk product, you have digestive problems, we’ll probably tell you, ‘It looks like you may be lactose intolerant, please speak with your nutritionist or doctor to confirm this.’ We’re not diagnosing, we are just guiding,” says Hoffmann.

tellspec_truffle

TellSpec was funded on Indiegogo, and it far exceeded its $100,000 goal (currently at $218,000, with five days remaining). While other spectrometers exist on the market already, Hoffmann says joining forces with Watson, a mathematician, meant TellSpec employ mathematical thinking, so the algorithm is smart and can better interpret what it’s scanning. “Our core IP is really the technology, the process. And this is the difference,” says Hoffmann. TellSpec beams a low-powered laser at the food in question, and low-energy photons are then emitted back to the TellSpec’s spectrometer, which sorts the photons by wavelength and determines what chemical compounds are within. The device is expected to hit the market in August 2014 at an initial price of $350-$400, and Hoffmann hopes demand will drive the price down to $50 in a few years.

We eat so badly, because we don’t know. We don’t have the time to really investigate,” says Hoffmann. ”So, when TellSpec says, ‘We found tartrazine (Yellow No. 5) in your food, it’s a yellow food dye that’s forbidden in China and a lot of Europe,’ you’ll wonder ‘What the heck is that yellow color doing in my corn chips?’ It’s there to make it look beautiful and more yellow. But come on, I think our health is more important than that.”

TellSpec is useful for people with allergies to things like soy or nuts — they can double-check that there’s no allergens in their food. It’s also a helpful tool for diabetics, since TellSpec can tell you calories per gram and outline how much fat, sodium and sugar are in a particular item you scan. Down the road, TellSpec will contain a camera so the device knows the volume of what you’re eating, too, and it can accurately indicate that you consumed 67 grams of sugar and 16 grams of fat in a given food. That data is powerful for people who need to be cognizant of what they’re putting in their bodies.

“What has been missing in big data is information about food — information about where this food exists in the world, which people are consuming it, how they’re consuming it, what effect it has, how that food relates to certain pathologies or certain symptoms,” says Hoffmann. “Imagine being able to detect, in countries with huge amounts of contaminants in water and food, that, in fact, the chemicals in the water are actually neurotoxins, and that’s why the area has a high incidence of neurological disorders.” Hoffmann has high hopes for TellSpec, its implications and its potential use cases for global health.

She hopes to build a massive database of food information that could nip potential epidemics — like a Salmonella outbreak or Mad Cow Disease — in the bud, since people would be logging their symptoms in real time. For example, the database could show a spike in gastrointestinal symptoms within a 5-mile radius, a tip-off that something’s amiss in the local food or water.

TellSpec won’t be equipped to scan for microscopic bacteria and viruses by August, but those advancements are on the agenda, which could help TellSpec become a global health tool. (Currently, spectrometer technology is calibrated and designed to check for one or two raw elements, such as salmonella, and the tool doesn’t always care what else is in the food. “It’s not [checking] for every single ingredient, just for the ones people think are of concern,” says Hoffmann. TellSpec aims to be a holistic tool.)

“Imagine having people worldwide scanning their food — all those scans are going to be in our server in the cloud, and they’re going to help other people, because our algorithm will know if we’ve seen this type of mixture already,” says Hoffmann. “We’re looking to build a footprint of food data that then can be correlated with other information — such as the symptoms that a person has after eating certain foods — to improve diagnosis, prognosis and treatments in individual lives.”

Hoffmann says building a greener world with healthier people is the real mission of TellSpec, and data is integral to that mission. “We really have to stop this massive genocide, these chemicals being put in our food and our environment,” says Hoffmann. “We’re killing ourselves, and we’re allowing this to happen.” By providing information about what’s in our environment and how we react to it, TellSpec could help individuals stay healthy and medical professionals provide better health care. “We continue to grow the population, but we don’t focus on the health aspects of raising that population; every single human being born today has a toxic burden equal to or higher than their mother,” she says.

“We have to stop the world from killing itself,” says Hoffmann, who’s banking on the knowledge gleaned from TellSpec’s data to keep us alive and well.

Homepage image: TellSpec

source: http://mashable.com/2013/11/26/tellspec/?utm_cid=mash-com-fb-main-link

Pin ItFollow Me on Pinterest

A Hungarian surgeon to help Schumacher?

schumacherskiing

A Hungarian surgeon to help Schumacher?

Dr. Csókay has suggested the application of his technique

The application of vascular tunnels could help the racing driver, according to the Hungarian neurosurgeon.

The news broke on Thursday that Dr. András Csókay has contacted the doctors of Michael Schumacher offering medical assistance. The internationally acclaimed surgeon has suggested the application of his own surgical technique, which could increase the chances of recovery of the sportsman who suffered a skiing accident on Sunday and has been kept in a coma ever since.

The method developed in the late ’90s is used for the treatment of severe brain edema of traumatic origin. By creating a vascular tunnel around the main cortical veins and the arteries of the herniated brain, the technique not only reduces the ICP but also helps to avoid further vascular laesion as it assures the circulation and veinous drainage of the herniated part by preventing the blockage of the veins and arteries. The herniated part of the skull can either be readjusted later or replaced by plastic surgical methods. The surgeon suggested using this technique in case Schumacher’s condition gets critical.

Two of the eight doctors in the team have already responded to the proposition, but the responses have not been made public yet.

http://totalcarmagazine.com/features/2014/01/03/a_hungarian_surgeon_to_help_schumacher/

Pin ItFollow Me on Pinterest