Medicine Ball and Hiit Combine
Medicine ball exercises combine with HIIT body weight exercises to give you a workout for busy days. Form over speed. -Myy LeBeau-
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Medicine Ball and Hiit Combine
Medicine ball exercises combine with HIIT body weight exercises to give you a workout for busy days. Form over speed. -Myy LeBeau-
By: The. Fit. Combine.
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Sunset Overdrive - Gameplay Walkthrough - Fizzco Medicine - Part 25
This is TheMediaCows Sunset Overdrive Gameplay Walkthrough Part 25. Sunset Overdrive is being played by Ray with Dewey along for the ride! Sunset Overdrive was released on October 28, 2014...
By: TheMediaCows
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Sunset Overdrive - Gameplay Walkthrough - Fizzco Medicine - Part 25 - Video
Medicine Hat Christmas Lights 2014
Halls and houses in Medicine Hat are all decked out Christmas spirit. Here are some of the best and brightest. Video by Emma Bennett.
By: MedicineHatNews
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Subcommittee on Issues Relating to the Development of Chinese Medicine(2014/12/16)
Panel on Health Services Subcommittee on Issues Relating to the Development of Chinese Medicine Third meeting to be held on Tuesday, 16 December 2014, from 10:15 am to 12:15 pm in ...
By: Legislative Council of HKSAR
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Subcommittee on Issues Relating to the Development of Chinese Medicine(2014/12/16) - Video
SE308 Trade in Animal Parts for Traditional Medicine
A short video exploring different aspects of animal trade in traditional medicine, ultimately to answer the question: "anthropology and conservation: common ground or divided ground?" References:...
By: AveGluteusMaximus
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SE308 Trade in Animal Parts for Traditional Medicine - Video
Happy Holidays from Yale School of Medicine
A cross section of students, faculty, and staff reflect on what they did in 2014 and offer best wishes for the coming year. -- Yale School of Medicine Institutional Planning Communications...
By: YaleMedicine
Originally posted here:
Thomas Myers - Spatial Medicine and Aging
Thomas Myers from Anatomy Trains gives us more to be aware of in regards to integration through fascia and how it affects our health! This term "Spatial Medicine" is one that carries huge...
By: functionalpatterns
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A Career in Geriatric Medicine
Dr Shetty, Stroke Consultant Consultant Geriatrician in the University Hospital of Wales, Cardiff talks to Year4Geriatrics about the changes he has seen during his career in Geriatric and...
By: Year4Geriatrics
Originally posted here:
Blood transfusions are of importance not only in human medicine. Also animals do need blood donations. The University of Veterinary Medicine, Vienna operates a blood bank for dogs for more than a decade. But also cats can donate blood for acute emergencies. Horses need blood donations especially during operations that involve high blood loss. Sheep, goats and other ruminants require transfusions when plagued by serious infestations of parasites. Three vets from different areas of expertise explain how blood transfusions work with different animal species and how they can save lives.
Blood can hardly be created through artificial means, but it can be transferred within a species. Reasons for a blood transfusion among dogs and cats are usually serious accidents, large operations, certain types of cancer, cases of intoxication with rat poison, serious infectious diseases such as the tick-borne babesiosis, and blood illnesses including haemolytic or inherited bleeding disorders such as haemophilia.
At the University of Veterinary Medicine, Vienna dog owners can bring their animals to donate blood regularly or as needed. Blood donations two to four times a year per dog is the maximum. About 15 minutes are required for a donation. Dogs must have a minimum weight of 25 kilograms and usually donate about 450 millilitres of blood. For cats, depending on their size, the amount taken is about 50 millilitres. Cats are typically sedated for the procedure. For most dogs, on the other hand, donating blood does not involve any serious stress. Should a donation cause too much anxiety or stress, the animal will be excluded as a donor.
Not all blood is alike
As with people, animals also have different blood types. Animal blood, as well as human blood, is divided into various groups based on different surface proteins found on the red blood cells. More than twelve different blood type systems have been described for dogs, although in practice dogs are only tested for DEA 1.1 positive or DEA 1.1 negative. Cats exhibit three different types of blood, horses eight and bovines eleven. The transfusion of an unsuitable blood type can have fatal consequences for animals, especially when a cat with blood type B receives type A blood. For horses and ruminants, the first time transfusion of 'wrong' donor blood is generally safe. With each additional transfusion, however, blood types become crucial, as the animals have produced antibodies against the foreign blood that can cause serious immune reactions.
Blood donations come with a health check
Dogs and cats can be registered as blood donors at the Clinical Unit of Internal Medicine Small Animals of the Vetmeduni Vienna. The animals receive a donor card and undergo a thorough examination before each donation. This mandatory health check includes a complete blood count, a test for blood parasites, and a check-up for viral infections.
"Donating blood does not harm the animals. The donated amount can be quickly regenerated by the animal's organism," says specialist for small animal internal medicine and blood bank coordinator Nicole Luckschander-Zeller. "We pay special attention to making sure that donor animals feel good during donation. That's why, after every donation, we give the animals a little snack."
Dog and cat blood is not only used as a whole. Individual blood components, such as plasma or erythrocyte concentrates, are stored and used when needed.
Horses as blood donors and recipients
Continue reading here:
The bloody truth: How blood donations can save animals' lives
BO, Sierra LeoneMorning rounds have just begun at an Ebola treatment center here in the city of Bo, in central Sierra Leone.
The patients who are ableshuffle out of a tent towards two layers of chain-link fence that separate them from the outside2 meters minimum distance. Some clutch bottles of water, bright orange soda, or foil-wrapped nutritional bars. A woman in an orange printed wrap skirt lags behind the others, struggling to slide a sandal on to her foot. She came here in bad shape with her husband and three children, but she is improving; she was recently taken off intravenous fluids.
More From the Ebola Front Lines:
For all the medicine they provide at this center, physicians and staff from Doctors Without Bordersspend as much time encouraging the patients to eat, drink, and keep fighting. Every patient gets a standard regimen of antibiotics, paracetemol and other pain medications, vitamins, oral rehydration therapy or intravenous fluids. Drugs can control nausea for those who need them; everyone gets antimalarials.
When de Polnay and the other staff enter the containment tents where patients are housed, they attend to medical tasks first. Then, they coax patients to eat; the centers kitchen dishes up soup, rice, and local comfort foods like corn or rice porridge called pap, and cassava root-based foo foo, to encourage patients. Take a bite for your son, de Polnay tells one patient, a mother whose toddler arrived here at the treatment center with her.
Many of the patients arent in any condition to feed themselves, thoughthey need to be fed, to have fluids administered, and to be bathed. Doctors and nurses have limited time to spend with their patients, who total 54 today. The clock starts ticking once the health workers don their personal protective equipment: Tyvek suit, apron, two layers of gloves, boots, goggles, a hood and a respirator. Its almost too hot to actually work. After an hour or more with their entire bodies enclosed in rubber and polymers, the doctors time with the patients is up.
Then its up to the patients themselves.
Everyone who has worked with Ebola patients talks about the will to survive, and how much difference it makes. Maybe they say it because the treatment is symptomatic, addressing the dehydration and pain caused by Ebola instead of attacking the virus itself. Maybe they say it because theyve seen patients who seem to be improving suddenly start to backslide. Or maybe they say it because they want to believe it. Unlike in a Western hospital, where patients this ill are plugged into monitors and watched over all day and night, even the desperately sick patients here spend a lot of time alone in their beds. Its simply too dangerous for someone to stay with them around the clock. Few people know what goes on in those lonely hours when patients are on the ward with only the sick for company.
On her first evening on the ward, de Polnay went to check on a boy in the treatment tent; the boy asked her to check on his father, lying next to him first. But the father was dead. The boy had spent the night beside his fathers corpse.
Amid this routine calamity, some patients give up. De Polnay tells the story of an ambulance driver who was admitted here not long ago. Though he seemed relatively well to her, he told her one night: You wont find me here tomorrow; Ill be dead. He was right.
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For Ebola Patients in Sierra Leone, Survival Takes More Than Medicine
Pakistan School Attack in Peshawar - Many Students Killed in Taliban Milatary School Attack
PESHAWAR: At least 100 people were killed while 38 others sustained injuries when unidentified armed men opened fire on a private school in Peshawar on Tuesday, Express News reported. The...
By: Shehzeen khan
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Pakistan School Attack in Peshawar - Many Students Killed in Taliban Milatary School Attack - Video
A University of Washingtonpanel headed by former Gov. Dan Evansbelieves the best way to quickly increase the number of doctors working in rural Washington is for the UW to expand its medical school program in Spokane.
The panel also recommends creating more residencies in rural areas, particularly Eastern Washington.
It didnot weigh in on whats becomea sore point between UW and Washington State University: whether its also necessary for WSUto build its own, separate medical school in Spokane to alleviate the physician shortage. The panels report notes that it was not given the task of determining if a separately accredited medical school is necessary or should be pursued by WSU.
The UW and WSU, which used to worktogether to provide medical training at WSUs Spokane campus, split earlier this year over how best to increasethe number of doctors in Washingtons rural areas. There is a shortage of primary care doctors in those areastoday, a problem thatsexpected to get worseas baby boom-era doctors retire.
WSU wants to build its own medical school, and the UW wants to increase the number of doctors it already trains in that city.The issue is likely to be resolved by the state Legislature in the 2015 session because both schools need money to accomplish their aims.
What the panel recommended:increase the size ofthe UWs Spokane program so that it canaccept120 new medical students a year, up from 40 now; grow medicaleducation opportunitiesbeyondSpokane by partnering with other communities, such as the Tri-Cities;include a specific plan for research and commercialization activities for the UWs Spokane program; andexpand medical residencies in rural and underserved areas.
The panel was convened by UW President Michael Young, and included two current WSUregents, two former WSU regents, two UW regents and one former UW regent.
Both universities hiredconsultants that endorse the economic wisdomof each institutions proposals. But while WSUofficialssaid the state needs both the UW Spokane program and a WSU medical school, theUW report says that Eastern Washington cannot support two medical schools because theres a limit on the number of clinical training and residency sites available.
Continued here:
The University of Washington Medical School should proceed as soon as possible to expand and modernize its program in Spokane, a special advisory council set up by the university said Tuesday. It should aggressively pursue regional expansion opportunities, the council said, with a special nod to the Tri-Cities, where it said expanded residencies and medical education are priorities for the business and health care community. It also should develop more residency programs, particularly for rural and underserved areas. The special Presidential Advisory Council on Medical Education Access and Affordability, an 11-member body headed by former Gov. Dan Evans, is silent
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The University of Washington Medical School should proceed as soon as possible to expand and modernize its program in Spokane, a special advisory council set up by the university said Tuesday.
It should aggressively pursue regional expansion opportunities, the council said, with a special nod to the Tri-Cities, where it said expanded residencies and medical education are priorities for the business and health care community. It also should develop more residency programs, particularly for rural and underserved areas.
The special Presidential Advisory Council on Medical Education Access and Affordability, an 11-member body headed by former Gov. Dan Evans, is silent on whether Washington State University should develop its own medical school in Spokane. It does say the two universities should work together on a plan to provide medical education in the state and specifically for Spokane.
UW operates a five-state consortium known as WWAMI for Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, Montana and Idaho which was innovative when it started 43 years ago and has been successful and efficient, Evans said: It needs to be expanded, modernized and adjusted so it can continue to produce high-quality physicians for the next 40 years.
The two universities will ask for money for separate medical school programs in Spokane in the upcoming legislative session. UW is seeking $8 million to have more slots for first- and second-year students at the five-state WWAMI program located on WSU-Spokane campus, while WSU is seeking $2.5 million for to begin hiring staff and applying for accreditation for a new medschool.
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Panel says UW should expand med program in Spokane - Tue, 16 Dec 2014 PST
Heart: Dr Jessica King, the first Aboriginal graduate of the ANU Medical School, celebrates with her proud mother Dr Christine Fejo-King. Photo: Jamila Toderas
In her career as a doctor Jessica King will be called on to provide a second opinion at some stage and she'll understand why.
It was the second opinion of a school guidance counsellor that changed the course of her life and lead to her becoming the first Aboriginal medical student to graduate from the Australian National University Medical School on Wednesday.
Dr King graduated with a Doctor of Medicine and Surgery, the school's premier four-year post graduate program.
Her proud mother Dr Christine Fejo-King recalled how her daughter's first high school counsellor in Darwin had told her to become a cleaner. They changed schools soon after.
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The counsellor at the new school had a decidedly different attitude. After Ms King won school biology awards, this counseller said, "You have the brains have you thought about medicine?"
Dr Fejo-King said, "It tells all the other Aboriginal kids that you can have a dream."
Dr King continued her interest in biology as an undergraduate science student at ANU after the family moved from Darwin to Canberra when she was 18, following this up with her medical studies.
Her plan is to eventually become a rural doctor. "My heart is in the county," she said.
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Dr Jessica King becomes ANU's first Aboriginal medical school graduate
The University of Washington Medical School should proceed as soon as possible to expand and modernize its program in Spokane, a special advisory council set up by the university saidTuesday.
It should aggressively pursue regional expansion opportunities, the council said, with a special nod to the Tri-Cities, where it said expanded residencies and medical education are priorities for the business and health care community. It also should develop more residency programs, particularly for rural and underservedareas.
The special Presidential Advisory Council on Medical Education Access and Affordability, an 11-member body headed by former Gov. Dan Evans, is silent
You have viewed 20 free articles or blogs allowed within a 30-day period. FREE registration is now required for uninterrupted access.
S-R Media, The Spokesman-Review and Spokesman.com are happy to assist you. Contact Customer Service by email or call 800-338-8801
The University of Washington Medical School should proceed as soon as possible to expand and modernize its program in Spokane, a special advisory council set up by the university saidTuesday.
It should aggressively pursue regional expansion opportunities, the council said, with a special nod to the Tri-Cities, where it said expanded residencies and medical education are priorities for the business and health care community. It also should develop more residency programs, particularly for rural and underservedareas.
The special Presidential Advisory Council on Medical Education Access and Affordability, an 11-member body headed by former Gov. Dan Evans, is silent on whether Washington State University should develop its own medical school in Spokane. It does say the two universities should work together on a plan to provide medical education in the state and specifically forSpokane.
UW operates a five-state consortium known as WWAMI for Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, Montana and Idaho which was innovative when it started 43 years ago and has been successful and efficient, Evanssaid.
It needs to be expanded, modernized and adjusted so it can continue to produce high-quality physicians for the next 40 years, Evanssaid.
Read more here:
Panel urges UW to expand medical offerings in Spokane - Wed, 17 Dec 2014 PST
Liberty tunnels again
via YouTube Capture.
By: emmyKatherine
Excerpt from:
Return to metal detecting at the Seated Liberty site.
Earlier this year, Evan and I found a spot that produced A LOT of coins including my first Seated Liberty dime. This return metal detecting hunt sure made me happy!
By: The Silver Fiend
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Return to metal detecting at the Seated Liberty site. - Video
2010 Jeep Liberty Used Cars Berlin CT
http://www.truautomallct.com This 2010 Jeep Liberty is available from Tru Automall. For details, call us at 860-829-7100.
By: TruAutoMall
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RWW News: Fischer Says Gay Rights Are The #39;Greatest Threat #39; To Liberty America Has Ever Faced
http://www.rightwingwatch.org/content/fischer-gay-rights-are-greatest-threat-liberty-america-has-ever-faced Right Wing Watch reports on the extreme rhetoric and activities of key right-wing...
By: RWW Blog
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22K/14K Gold 8" Solid Multi-Liberty Coin Bracelet, 21.9g with Jennifer Coffey
For More Information or to Buy: ...
By: QVC
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22K/14K Gold 8" Solid Multi-Liberty Coin Bracelet, 21.9g with Jennifer Coffey - Video