Discussing alternative medicine choices for better health outcomes

In the field of medicine there has often been a divide between those who focus on modern medicine and those who prefer alternative practices. But pediatrician Sunita Vohra is a firm believer there should be room for both.

A new study from Vohra, a professor in the Faculty of Medicine & Dentistry's Department of Pediatrics at the University of Alberta, and a pediatric physician for Clinical Pharmacology with Alberta Health Services, is giving insight into the use of alternative medicines by pediatric cardiac patients and how effective they are seen to be. "We wanted to know if the use of alternative therapies helped or not, and we wanted to know if it hurt them or not," she says.

The study, published in the journal CMAJ Open, examined the use of alternative therapies such as multivitamins, minerals, chiropractic care and Aboriginal healing in 176 patients at the Stollery Children's Hospital in Edmonton, Alberta, and the Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario (CHEO) in Ottawa, Ontario.

It found 64 per cent of patients at the Stollery Children's Hospital reported using complementary and alternative medicine products and practices, compared with just 36 per cent at CHEO. Of those patients, Vohra says most had no regrets about their choices.

"The vast majority felt that they had been helped by the complementary therapy that they took and it was extremely unusual for them to report that they felt an adverse event had occurred because of it."

The study also found one third of patients and their families did not discuss the use of alternative medicines with their physicians. Vohra believes it shows that patients may be reluctant to discuss their choices if they're not sure how it will be received by health care providers.

That decision could have important health consequences, says Vohra, who also serves as director of the Complementary and Alternative Research and Education (CARE) program at the University of Alberta, and that patients' discussing alternative therapies with health professionals is vital in order for them to make informed choices.

"There may be some therapies that help children feel better, but there may be others that, unbeknownst to the family, cause interaction between a specific natural health product and a prescription medicine. In that setting, instead of helping the child get better, harm may actually be happening."

Vohra stresses the need for open communication and says children's hospitals in Canada need to do a better job of providing information to patients looking at other avenues to health.

"That communication is essential because the health-care providers and the parents -- together we are a team. And everyone's hope is for that child's better health."

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Discussing alternative medicine choices for better health outcomes

UW, WSU to pursue different paths over medical school

SPOKANE Officials for the University of Washington and Washington State University have reached an agreement to go their own ways regarding WSUs proposal to open its own medical school in Spokane.

Last month, WSU announced it would seek state approval to open its own medical school, which would focus on increasing the number of physicians practicing in underserved rural areas.

The UW had opposed that proposal.

On Friday, the schools issued a joint statement saying they had reached a deal that will mutually dissolve their partnership, known by the acronym WWAMI, in which students are trained by the UWs School of Medicine to serve communities in Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, Montana and Idaho. The acronym is made up of the first letter of each states name.

Leaders from both schools agreed that the UW and WSU will independently pursue their respective proposals to meet the states medical-education needs and physician shortage.

The two universities have signed a memorandum of understanding that acknowledges both WSUs immediate efforts to secure accreditation for a new medical school and the UW School of Medicines independent pursuit of rapid expansion of its four-year WWAMI program in Spokane.

Much of that work will involve money from the Legislature.

The collective needs of our students, the Spokane community and our state are our top priority, UW President Michael K. Young said.

To this end, the UW remains fully committed to immediately expanding our medical school in Spokane, including a commitment to grow the research, industry-commercialization and medical-residency opportunities that will ensure a vibrant health-care economy well into the future, Young said.

WSU President Elson S. Floyd agreed.

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UW, WSU to pursue different paths over medical school

Wow of the Week: Medical school honors donated bodies, but how long before virtual dissections dominate?

Human anatomy class is a right of passage for medical school students, but the bodies they dissect tend to be an afterthought. Who can know the story behind this person on the lab table before them and the choices that ultimately brought them there? The opportunity to go to med school tuition free? A strong belief in education? A small gesture that they will continue to have value once theyve shed this mortal coil?

University of Cincinnati College of Medicine is hosting its annual body donor memorial today. It is one of many that are held by medical schools around the country, mainly for the benefit of families so they can say good bye to loved ones. It is also a chance for medical school students to humanize the cadavers they dissect. The Medical College receives more than 400 bodies each year, some by families who see it as the most reasonable alternative to a costly funeral.

But it may be a fading practice. Medical schools are increasingly shifting to virtual dissection tools with iPads. Others have compromised. Columbia Medical School, for example uses an iPad app developed by a couple of medical school students that helps students interact with a particular part of the party and zoom in to view skin, muscle, tendons or bone. Its an approach that varies from school to school.

Australia-based Anatomedia developed a virtual cadaver that lets programmers assign tactile qualities and make objects respond to the movement which can be stiffness, and textures like the firmness of muscle or the flabbiness of belly fat. Norman Eizenberg, an associate professor at Monash University, founded the company.

In an interview with Digital Trends, Eizenberg said: A lot of programs across the country are moving to online or digital dissection, For me, I dont get a comprehensive understanding of the location and variation of the anatomy unless I see it myself.

Ellie Farr, a second-year medical students, who is among a medical students group participating in the event said she hoped the shift to digital cadavers would be limited. A lot of programs across the country are moving to online or digital dissection, observed Farr. For me, I dont get a comprehensive understanding of the location and variation of the anatomy unless I see it myself.

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Wow of the Week: Medical school honors donated bodies, but how long before virtual dissections dominate?

American Way: between Democrats and Republicans, a libertarian "third force" is emerging

The libertarian sentiment reflects the pitchfork politics that gave rise to the Tea Party on the right and the Occupy movements on the left that were both fuelled by public disillusion with the power of conventional politics to deliver anything other than the stagnant status quo.

Measuring the potential electoral impact of libertarianism is difficult precisely because it cuts across traditional party lines, which is both its protean strength and political weakness in an era of big money politics.

Put a capital 'L' on libertarianism and it largely evaporates Gary Johnson, the Libertarian Party candidate in 2012, won only 1 per cent of the popular vote (1.2m people), but research by the Cato Institute, the libertarian think-thank, points a much deeper pool of Americans with libertarian leanings.

When they asked voters if they considered themselves "fiscally conservative and socially liberal also known as libertarian", some 44 per cent of Americans were happy to be placed in that category.

The politician most obviously trying to capitalise on the idea that Americans aren't quite so easily pigeonholed into red and blue boxes is Rand Paul, a Republican senator from Kentucky who the bookies rate as a leading contender for 2016.

As the son of veteran libertarian Ron Paul, his formula will be to bring libertarian ideas off the fringe where his cranky dad always languished and into the mainstream, tapping that well of disaffection that resonates across party lines.

The younger Paul has demonstrated a knack for cutting through when it comes to popular issues.

When riot police overstepped the mark in Ferguson, Missouri following the shooting of a black teenager this summer, it was Mr Paul who spoke out about the obscene militarisation of American police forces, hitting a sweet spot with both young liberals and conservative anti-big government types.

In the same vein and in a rare moment of bipartisanship, Mr Paul is working with a Democrat colleague to end the mandatory sentencing laws that are clogging up America's bloated and broken jail system with non-violent offenders, at vast cost and to little good effect.

It is a bold gambit that could resonate both with minorities particularly African-Americans who are disproportionately sentenced and the young drug decriminalisation lobby which has gathered strength since Colorado and Washington state legalised marijuana in 2012.

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American Way: between Democrats and Republicans, a libertarian "third force" is emerging

Florida September 2014 – Day 8 – Universal Studios & Islands of Adventure – Video


Florida September 2014 - Day 8 - Universal Studios Islands of Adventure
So day 8 was the day that the heavens opened and caused an immense flood, unfortunately I didn #39;t film hardly any of it as I knew it #39;d ruin my camcorder, but trust me when I say we had to wade...

By: Initially CameraShy

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Florida September 2014 - Day 8 - Universal Studios & Islands of Adventure - Video