Popular Articles
Stretch Mark Remedies

Mother Gives Birth To Twins With Different Fathers, US
11-month old Dallas-born twins Justin and Jordan have different fathers, a phenomenon known as heteropaternal superfecundation that is so rare there
generic viagra online
Nursing Shortage Leads To More Students, New Training Programs
"Long second shrift to other medical training, nursing education has taken on new relevance as the country faces a drastic shortage of nurses and a thin job market overall," The Dallas Morning News reports.
News of the day
Opinion Pieces Discuss Violence Against Abortion Providers, Future Of Profession
The Los Angeles Times and the Washington Post recently published opinion pieces responding to the shooting death of Kansas abortion provider George Tiller. Summaries appear below.~ Suzanne Poppema, Los Angeles Times: "We must turn [Tiller"s] terrifying end into the beginning of a new era when doctors can save lives without risking their own," Poppema, a former abortion provider and current board chair of Physicians for Reproductive Choice and Health, writes in a Times opinion piece. Poppema, a friend and colleague of Tiller"s, writes that the state and local police, the FBI, the state of Kansas and the federal government all "should have done more to protect" Tiller, who since the 1970s had endured bombings, a nonlethal shooting, harassment of his family and other threats. "We can all pay tribute to [Tiller"s] legacy by treating abortion providers as physicians, not pariahs, and by explaining and openly supporting their work as doctors," Poppema writes, adding, "Wherever women"s access to abortion is in danger, our government, our medical institutions and the public must step forward to protect it." She continues, "A show of strength and support will give courage to doctors who have the training to provide abortions but are afraid to use it." Poppema writes that Tiller "trained hundreds of doctors in abortion procedures," concluding, "We must erase fear as the reason young physicians won"t enter the field that George found so rewarding. ... We owe it to George to let them practice" (Poppema, Los Angeles Times, 6/6).~ Rozalyn Farmer Love, Washington Post: Deciding to terminate a pregnancy is "a very private, intensely personal decision," Farmer Love -- a University of Alabama-Birmingham third-year medical student studying obstetrics and gynecology -- writes in a Post opinion piece. Farmer Love writes that she was raised in a conservative Christian household and used to "believe that abortion is wrong," but now supports abortion rights and hopes to eventually provide abortion services as part of her ob-gyn practice. She adds that she formerly felt that abortion in the third trimester of pregnancy "crossed a line," but she "began to see late-trimester abortions in a very different light" while working in a research job in graduate school. In a case involving a fetus with a lethal congenital abnormality, Farmer Love says she learned how the woman and her partner "needed a caring and compassionate physician to help them through this dark moment, and if they chose not to continue the pregnancy, they also needed a physician who was both skilled enough and brave enough to provide them with the care they needed. They needed Dr. Tiller" (Farmer Love, Washington Post, 6/7).
Diagnostics

Medical Students Chosen For Global Pulse Editorial Board

The American Medical Student Association (AMSA), the nation"s largest, independent medical student organization, is proud to announce the 2009-2010 editorial board for its online international health journal, Global Pulse. Editors-in-Chief Julio Bracero-Rodriguez, MD, Ponce School of Medicine, Puerto Rico Hana Akselrod, Mount Sinai School of Medicine Associate Editor-in-Chief Sujal Parikh, University of Michigan Webmaster Din Garcia, New Jersey Medical School Editors Wilnise Jasmin, American University of Antigua College of Medicine Paul Johnson, Michigan State University, College of Human Medicine Susan Lewis, Rosalind Franklin University, Chicago Medical School Rebecca Mitchell, University of California, San Francisco Daniel Pak, University of Michigan Michael Richards, University of Illinois-Chicago Jennifer Weinberg, University of Pennsylvania Global Pulse has a readership of more than 17,000 individuals and medical institutions. The journal is written and produced by medical students and is funded by AMSA; it does not accept third party funding. "With our 5th volume in as many years, Global Pulse has established itself as an internationally renowned publication that exposes global health topics and showcases medical student"s life-changing experiences abroad," says Dr. Julio Bracero-Rodriguez, editor-in-chief, Global Pulse. "Easily our most successful issue ever, the superb quality of articles we have received, as well as the interest and enthusiasm of global health leaders in our publication, clearly demonstrates the need for a global health journal among the medical community." The current issue is available at: http://www.globalpulsejournal.com/blog. Included is an exclusive, in-depth interview with Dr. Julio Frenk, Dean of Harvard"s School of Public Health; personal reflections on the Native Health Initiative; bringing breast cancer diagnosis to the developing world; the mental health of child soldiers; and amazing photo galleries from Ghana, Mozambique, and Sudan. Follow the latest news and developments at the Global Pulse blog, http://www.globalpulsejournal.com/blog. Readers can also follow Global Pulse via Twitter at "GlobalPulse" and Facebook by searching "Global Pulse Journal." American Medical Student Association


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