Health professionals

Dietician (1)
Doctor (126)
Medical officer (2)
Nurse (7)
Practitioner (1)
Surgeon (20)

Synopsis: 5. medicine & health: Health professionals:


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Software can then be used to remove the points above the ground, according to University of Alabama archaeologist Dr Sarah Parcak,


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Dr. Gary Small, director of the Center on Aging at UCLA and author of oeibrain, said Internet use activated more parts of the brain than reading a book did.


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On weekends, the federal government physician from Albuquerque likes to do yard work and prune the fruit trees he has in his backyard.


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Several experimental vertical farming projects like Dr. Dickson Despommiers at Columbia University are in various conceptual and experimental stages of implementation.


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Look for wait-less systems to spring to life in doctor offices, auto service shops, pharmacies, Disneyland,

Data can be sent directly to a doctor or saved (confidentially) to the cloud. Lifelens has created a smartphone app to diagnose malaria.


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#Similarly, whenever a column is written about the best paying jobs of the future, jobs like civil engineers, registered nurses,

Nano-Medics The medical problems most people have can be traced to a single cell or a small group of them.

Health professionals capable of working on the nano-level, both in designing diagnostics systems, remedies, and monitoring solutions will be in high demand. 23.

Amnesia Surgeons Doctors who are skilled in removing bad memories or destructive behavior. 55. Executioners for Virus-Builders In the future, virus-builders who get caught will have a choice.

or spend some quality time with the Amnesia Surgeon. Final Thoughts The jobs and occupations listed above are just scratching the surface.


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It s conceivable that your doctor would be able to diagnose you remotely based on that information

and doctors can even perform surgery remotely. IBM also predicted real-time speech translation now exemplified by products like Samsung s Galaxy speech translation.


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200 doctors signed up, but the company is a long way from making a profit.


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Even if you had a doctor document some medical condition, if you didn t come to work,


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This tech,#says Dr. Philip Low, the founder of a medical technology firm called Neurovigil

According to the program s manager, Dr. Matt Goodman, an electric field destabilizes the flame s underlying structure rather than blanketing the fire to smother it.

and better rest,#says Dr. Emmanuel Mignot of Stanford university. It ll be less of a hammer on the brain.#


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#Similarly, whenever a column is written about the best paying jobs of the future, jobs like civil engineers, registered nurses,


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One doctor claims that a fern extract, containing the compound polypodium leucotomos, can act as such.

Said Dr. Paul Long head of the three-year project,#oethere would have to be a lot of toxicology tests done first but

Queens University director Dr. Roel Vertegaal has largely the same vision of the project.##oethis is the future,


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The study, led by Dr. Teruhiko Wakayama at the RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology in Japan,


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#And in Arizona,#oethe Pima County Public library offers on-site expert medical help, making the library the first in the nation to employ a public health nurse on site.

#Library Nurse Program Mangamania!!##The library s annual manga, anime, and graphic novels convention for teens#oecombines hands-on workshops, cultural demonstrations, gaming (open play and tournaments),


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and ways to improve upon them. 4. Real-time Healthcare Monitors Rather than doing the snapshot-in time testing that doctors do today,


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Lisa Maki, a cofounder of the tech start-up Pokitdok it helps consumers find low-cost health care providers says 15 of the company s 23 employees are based in Charleston.


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Nano-Medics The medical problems most people have can be traced to a single cell or a small group of them.

Health professionals capable of working on the nano-level, both in designing diagnostics systems, remedies, and monitoring solutions will be in high demand. 111.

Bio-Factory Doctors Strategists, and Developers 112. DNA Scientists 113. Gene Sequencers 114. Treatment Monitors Micro-Colleges The systems used to create colleges centuries ago seems justifiably primitive by today s standards.

Amnesia Surgeons Doctors who are skilled in removing bad memories or destructive behavior. 162. Geoengineers Weather Control Specialists We are moving past the age of meteorology


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The September 2012 study published in the journal Soft Matter by Dr. Bhushan and engineering graduate student Greg Bixler shows that rice leaves


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Dr. Robert Gorkin is a Strategic Development Officer at the ARC Centre of Excellence for Electromaterials Science (ACES.


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The lab section would have to replicate the atmospheric pressure suggested for future Mars habitats by Dr. Robert Zubrin President of The Mars Society.

Indeed the Mars Gravity Biosatellite competition (created by the Mars Society following a brainstorm session between Dr. Zubrin


popsci_2013 00300.txt

/Brazilian Doctor Arrested For Using Silicone Fingers To Fool Fingerprint-Based Biometric Check-Inour keyless

Police said she had six silicone fingers with her at the time of her arrest three of which have already been identified as bearing the fingerprints of co-workers. http://disinfo. com/2013/03/brazilian-doctor-arrested-for-using-silicone-fingers-to-fool-fingerprint-based-biometric-check in/Mr


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You'd better get to a doctor. Bubba: Oh my God! -Just a'bot that is hot in a'lectronic world.


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Scannon a medical doctor and founder of a biotechnology company first visited Palau in 1993 as a recreational scuba diver.


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In the 1800's the AMA went so far as to threaten to revoke the license of any doctor who washed their hands.

Dr. Mezzomo led the study in concert with the Department of Genetics and Morphology and the Institute of Biological sciences at University of Brasilia and it was published in the Journal of Hematology


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when he showed it to knee-replacement surgeons they deemed it too weak to withstand the body's routine abuse.

so that surgeons could practice. At Stanford researchers have tried to get around this problem by breeding mice with livers made up mostly of human cells.

or other defects so that surgeons could practice before entering an operating room. Whole transplantable organs that function properly will be the ultimate challenge

Bioprinting organs with cells grown from a patient's own body could eventually help doctors churn out perfect matches at will.

and a open minded surgeon is capable of growing a new limb or whatever and stem cells of any kind are required not!


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#The First Lab-Grown Hamburger Is Servedsince 2008 Dr. Mark Post has been working on growing edible meat in a laboratory.

Dr. Post a cardiovascular biologist from Maastricht University brought his raw burger out in a petri dish under a cloche.

I think it's a very good start said Dr. Post. This was mostly to prove that we can make it.

Dr. Post currently estimates that it will take 10 to 20 years before cultured meat can be mass-produced.

For the last few years the project has been funded by an anonymous benefactor who Dr. Post revealed today is Sergey Brin.

Dr. Post answered some other questions from the audience. Can you make a steak? In theory. We are currently focusing on minced meat products using shorter fibers

The leftovers were taken home for Dr. Post's children. well with any new product lets see what happens to the first few people who eat this


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they're easy to confuse for some kind of Dr. Moreau-type madness but even when you've got a grip on


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And like doctor mangala! OR jack the. ripper! For your IMMOVABLE FEMACAMPS. GUN CONTROL TAG Guilloteen's!

And like doctor mangala! OR jack the. ripper! For your IMMOVABLE FEMACAMPS. GUN CONTROL TAG Guilloteen's!


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Fukushima is expected by Dr. Helen Caldicott M d. to cause at least 1 million deaths by cancer due to radioactivity already released.

Dr. Romeo F. Quijano said this about nuclear radiation: The small amount of radiation claimed to be safe by authorities added to our increasingly fragile environment will cause serious harm to the health of human beings and other living organisms all over the world.

Dr. Yablokov found ONE MILLION deaths due to Chernobyl. 5. Dr. Wing found that lung cancers rose dramatically in people exposed to the Three Mile Island radiation plume. 6. Dr. Gould

and Dr. Sternglass found a statistically significant increase of ONE MILLION deaths after Three Mile Island.

See the video Three Mile Island Revisited on youtube) 7. Dr. Mangano and Dr. Sherman found an increase in infant mortality in the U s. after Fukushima. 8. Dr. Mangano also found that in the first 50 weeks after fallout from Japan reached the U s. hypothyroidism increased 28%increase on west

coast. 9. Dr. Gofman did studies on the increases of breast cancer due to nuclear radiation. 10.

Even the pro-nuclear World health organization says breast cancer and leukemia will increase after Fukushima and predicts a 70%increase thyroid cancer risk in females exposed to Fukushima radiation as infants. 11.

Dr. Wertelecki found teratomos conjoined twins mocrophthalmia NTD microcephaly horrible birth defects and a decrease in cognitive skills due to Chernobyl.

/id=hcfthe doctors at the Symposium have spent decades studying the effects of nuclear radiation and their grim analysis is in their presentations.

You should be able to figure that out yourself from Dr. Gould and Dr. Sternglass claiming a million deaths due to the radiation release from Three Mile Island.

What you're missing in your extremely narrow and warped view on nuclear radiation is balance and perspective.

Doctors say it's good for you. 5 servings daily. I do agree with Anyicon's statement about comparison to air travel yes it's by all means the safest mode of travel out there


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In this essay from the September 1913 issue of Popular Science Dr. John Silas Lankford from the University of Texas describes how the country where death with grim terror reigned as king queen

The unconquerable Gorgas with a good force of physicians surgeons nurses expert sanitarians skilled engineers and helpers with ample supplies of disinfectants were put in the lead.


ScienceDaily_2013 02153.txt

and sheep was officiated by the Deputy Minister of Science Technology and Innovation Datuk Dr Abu Bakar Mohamad Diah in a brief ceremony on 24.oct 2013.

and tested from 1998 to 2005 by UPM scientists led by Prof Dr Mohd Zamri Saad of the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine.

The other scientist involved is Dr Md. Sabri Mohd Yusoff. The patent for the STVAC7 vaccine Has been fed commercialised to Tech Sdn Bhd for RM4 million

and marketing of the vaccine said the Vice chancellor of UPM Prof Datuk Dr Mohd Fauzi Hj Ramlan when speaking at the ceremony.

Dr Fauzi said FTU which was established in 1999 is equipped now with the facilities for upstream and downstream production of biotechnological products including packaging

Actual production for the commercialisation of the product with the GMP certification will begin in July 2014 using the Original Equipment Concept Dr Fauzi said.

Meanwhile replying to questions Prof Dr Zamri said the STVAC7 is a vaccine against mannheimiosis

This was proven to be said better protection Prof Zamri who graduated with his Doctor of Veterinary medicine degree from UPM before obtaining his Phd from Liverpool.


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Dr. Gee however has applied now successfully microct to visualize silicified conifer seed cones as old as 150 million years without cutting sawing

Dr. Gee hopes this study will provide researchers with an alternative to traditional techniques such as thin-sectioning


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Dr Susan Huxtable Director of Intellectual Property Commercialisation at The University of Nottingham believes that the N-Fix technology has significant implications for agriculture she said:


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The technique developed by Dr. Annemie Van der Linden and her laboratory at the University of Antwerp in Belgium will be one of the first published in Jove Behavior a new section of the video journal that focuses on observational and experimental techniques that seek to understand human and animal

By utilizing a high-resolution functional magnetic resonance imaging apparatus (fmri) Dr. Van der Linden and her colleagues can image the brains of live birds in a noninvasive environment.

and to a lesser extent on mice Dr. Van der Linden explains. Thus far songbird brains have been studied using electrophysiological and histological techniques.

and reproduce behavioral experiments such as bird fmri techniques as described in Dr. Van der Linden's article which are both novel and technically complex.

Proud to be included in this significant new section Dr. Van der Linden says MRI imaging techniques should in the near future lead to major conceptual advances in the study of how the brain changes behavior


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The work was led by Dr Manash Chatterjee an Adjunct Faculty member of Botany and Plant science at NUI Galway and has been published in the journal BMC Plant Biology.

Dr Chatterjee is currently a Science Foundation Ireland (SFI) ETS Walton Fellow at NUI Galway collaborating with the SFI Genetics and Biotechnology Lab of Professor Charles Spillane.

Dr Chatterjee's research uses an approach called TILLING (Targeting Induced Lesions In The Genome) an established non-GM method for creating

According to Dr Chatterjee: Over the centuries the sunflower has been cultivated for traits such as yield. However along the way many useful genetic variations have been lost.

Dr Chatterjee is involved also in research in the NUI Galway Plant and Agribiosciences Research Centre (PABC) to improve the bioenergy crop Miscanthus.


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If more studies confirm the technology's effectiveness the Nanovelcro Chip device could enable doctors to access

Researchers hope that by analyzing these CTCS doctors will be able to understand the tumor evolution in each individual.

and their invasiveness in a tissue culture dish doctors may be able to quickly adjust their treatment plans in response We are optimistic that the use of our Nanovelcro CTC technology will revolutionize prostate cancer treatment.

and may help doctors personalize therapies to a patient's unique cancer. To date CTC capture technologies have been able to do little more than count the number of CTCS which is informative but not very useful from a treatment planning perspective.


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But new research from Dr. Jay Narayan John C. Fan Distinguished Chair Professor of Materials Science and Engineering at NC State may revolutionize the sintering process.


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though many doctors and nutritionists recommend between 1200-1600 milligrams daily depending on a person's age and health.


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Dr. Robert Moore a pediatric pulmonologist at Baylor College of Medicine (BCM; and former BCM scientist Jacob Gage now with Nano3d Biosciences.


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and Wake Forest Baptist Department of Ophthalmology physicians Craig Greven M d. chair Matthew Giegengack M d. assistant professor and Keith Walter M d. associate professor.

and Dr. Walter serves on OSI's Medical Advisory board and provides consulting for OSI. Story Source:


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#Wildland fire modeling can lead to better predictionsif we can better understand scientifically how wildland fires behave we'll have a better chance to accurately predict the spatial and temporal evolution of high intensity wildfires says Dr. Shankar Mahalingam dean of the UAH College of Engineering

Dr. Mahalingam is studying how wildland fire propagates in an effort to be able to more accurately model such fires via physically based computational models.

and homes says Dr. Mahalingam. High confidence in the reliability of fire prediction is lacking today even as Western drought

That currently is about the range of prediction ability that we have with operational fire behavior models for low intensity fires Dr. Mahalingam says.

and managers who have fought blazes for years Dr. Mahalingam says. With funding from the U s. Department of agriculture's U s. Forest Service Division Dr. Mahalingam and his collaborator UAH Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering faculty member Dr. Babak Shotorban are currently supervising four doctoral

students in the MAE department to do the kind of basic forest fire combustion research that can move our predictive ability from the experiential realm to scientific mathematical models and longer-range computational predictions.

In 1998 his previous fundamental work in turbulent combustion at the University of Colorado at Boulder led Dr. Mahalingam to do NSF-sponsored field research in Alaska comparing the properties of prescribed permafrost

The process begins with pyrolysis the thermochemical decomposition of organic material at elevated temperature Dr. Mahalingam says.

or small tree that are prevalent in southern California have been the focus of Dr. Mahalingam's research:

Dr. Mahalingam studied that more closely in association with the U s. Forest Service while at the University of California Riverside.

and the other is moisture Dr. Mahalingam says. California's seasonal combination of Santa anna winds and rising temperatures both serve to dry the fuel for combustion and drive the fire's process once underway.

I call a fire transition phenomena Dr. Mahalingam says. Fire is losing heat through radiative

and started collaborating with Dr. Shotorban. Currently under study is the effect of shrubs as undergrowth in wildland fires

We light the shrub then figure out how much time it takes to burn out Dr. Mahalingam says.

Dr. Mahalingam asks. We are interested in how the fire spreads from shrub to shrub what the interaction is and at what spacing and

Meeting Salt lake city UT May 19-22 2013) All of this scientific effort is being driven by Dr. Mahalingam's quest for reliable scientific computerized fire prediction.


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To address this technological challenge Prof Sow Dr Lu Junpeng a postdoctoral candidate from the Department of physics at the NUS Faculty of science


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#Advantages, potential of computer-guided spinal surgeryin a series of research studies Cedars-Sinai spinal surgeons show that a new method of computer-guided spine surgery is beneficial for spinal reconstruction

The Cedars-Sinai surgeons highlight the advantages of a spinal navigation technique that uses high-speed computerized tomography (CT) imaging to navigate in and around the spinal column from different angles.

They present their findings in six articles published in the current issue of Neurosurgical Focus an online peer-reviewed journal published by the American Association of Neurological Surgeons.

It allows surgeons to more precisely and accurately place reconstruction screws in the narrow bony corridors of the spine avoiding nerves blood vessels and other critical structures.

which displays them on overhead monitors that allow precise tracking of surgical instruments as surgeons insert screws for reconstruction

Surgeons said the technique is superior to existing methods because of its precision and speed. They point out that even small miscalculations with two-dimensional technology can cause problems that require follow-up operations

The Cedars-Sinai surgeons say they have cut these to nearly zero by using computer-guided methods.

The surgeons said the technology has others applications for treating spinal disorders serving as a tool to remove tumors decompress the spinal column

This approach represents a major leap forward for instrumented spine surgery said Terrence T. Kim MD an orthopedic spine surgeon in the Cedars-Sinai Spine Center and expert in the computer-guided navigation field.

Johnson and Kim as study co-authors are Doniel Drazin MD a senior resident in the Department of Neurosurgery and Robert S. Pashman MD a clinical associate professor and orthopedic spine surgeon at the Cedars


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and technology leaders including Dr. Charles Wyman our president and CEO who will take this novel catalyst from the lab to the marketplace.


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and approaches that lead to improved outcomes are said unavailable Dr. Elizabeth Molyneux a pediatrician at QECH who co-authored the report with colleagues from Rice QECH Baylor College of Medicine and the University of Malawi.

and 354 clinicians have been trained to use them. Richards-Kortum and Maria Oden director of Rice's Oshman Engineering Design Kitchen (OEDK) founded the hands-on BTB engineering education program in 2006.


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valos who joined forces with Dr. Elizabeth Dumont and a mechanical engineer Dr. Ian Grosse (both of the University of Massachusetts at Amherst) in a recently published paper in Evolution that lays out the team's findings relating mechanical advantage

Dr. Beth Clare Queen Mary University. The key finding is that in a highly diverse group--New world Leaf-nosed bats--selection for mechanical advantage has shaped three distinct optimal skull shapes that correspond to feeding niches Dr. Dá

valos explains. The key development is an engineering model of a very complex structure--the skull--that can morph into both known observed skulls as well as into forms that do not exist

Dr. Dávalos and her Stony Brook University students generated the evolutionary hypotheses evolutionary trees and tests of selection reported in the study;

This means that even though these bats have been diverging for millions of years we can still find the signatures of natural selection in their current diversity says Dr. Dá

My goal as a scientist is to uncover the evolutionary forces that have shaped biodiversity says Dr. Dá


Smart_Planet_10 00660.txt

You get everyone from ex-mortgage brokers to attorneys and doctors. It's been pretty interesting


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and don't have access to doctors or nurses or midwives, or optometrists, or dentists, teaching them how to take care of these needs for their own people.


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Dr. Robert Freitas, author of the Nanomedicine series and senior research fellow at the Institute for Molecular Manufacturing, has described several potential food replacement technologies that are somewhat pill-like.

A nanobot Dr. Freitas calls a oelipovore would act like a microscopic cosmetic surgeon, sucking fat cells out of your body and giving off heat,

reciprocally, allowing robot tools to convey sensory tactile data to the doctors who wield them.

Okamura and her team have developed a haptic system that helps doctors view how much pressure their robotic instruments are applying to a given area.

This sort of research will enable surgeons to better perform minimally invasive surgeries. Surgical robots can also photograph,

and give surgeons a better sense of how the operation went, after the fact. oewhen you do assisted robot surgery,

A Hawaiian heart doctor named Benjamin Berg dictated a complicated surgery over an Internet feed for a Guam man located 3, 500 miles away.

Faster Internet speeds will allow doctors to monitor their patients around the clock in their patients homes.

It like getting a remote checkup from your doctor all the time. 2. Genome Specific Cures. A few years ago, the notion of cancer treatment that was specific to a person genome was seen as a fantasy.


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These abundant smart devices, Dr. Lazowska added, will oeinteract intelligently with people and with the physical world.

and send an electronic alert to a nearby nurse. Last month, G. E. announced that it was opening a new global software center in Northern California


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