Dead Space 2 Gameplay Walkthrough – Part 18: The Space Station – Video




Dead Space 2 Gameplay Walkthrough – Part 18: The Space Station COMMENT – RATE – SUBSCRIBE! DEAD SPACE 2 GAMEPLAY WALKTHROUGH – PART 18: THE SPACE STATION DEAD SPACE 2 GAMEPLAY WALKTHORUGH – PART 1: youtu.be PLAYLIST: www.youtube.com By: SargentTruffles Continue reading

Medical schools lead decline in applications to universities

The number of students applying to study medicine at the country’s universities plunged 14.2% for the 2011-2012 academic year from a year earlier, leading a trend of falling university enrollments, according to figures from the Higher Education Council. Statistics released Wednesday said the number of people applying for places at the universities dropped 2.5% for the current year, while there was a 1.1% drop in the number who were accepted Continue reading

Annals of Internal Medicine tip sheet for July 10, 2012, online issue

Public release date: 9-Jul-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ] Contact: Abbey Anderson aanderson@acponline.org 215-351-2656 American College of Physicians 1. Free Curriculum Aims to Educate Internal Medicine Residents About Wasteful Health Care Spending Developed by the American College of Physicians and the Alliance for Academic Internal Medicine, the New Curriculum is Part of ACP’s Ongoing High-Value, Cost-Conscious Care Initiative Economists warn that health care spending in the United States is rising at an unsustainable rate. Continue reading

Clot-busting medicine safe for use in warfarin-treated patients following stroke

Public release date: 26-Jun-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ] Contact: Debbe Geiger Debbe.Geiger@duke.edu 919-660-9461 Duke University Medical Center DURHAM, N.C. Continue reading

House releases plan to cut growth of Massachusetts health spending in half

By Liz Kowalczyk, Globe Staff Massachusetts House leaders released a major proposal to control health care costs Friday, calling for creation of a new agency to monitor health spending and order reductions in hospital and doctor fees it finds excessive. The lawmakers project their plan would save families thousands of dollars over the next five years. The long-awaited bill would require the medical industry to cut the rate of growth of health spending about in half, to roughly 3.6 percent a year, mirroring the overall growth in the Massachusetts economy. Continue reading