24 MAR 2013 by ideonexus

 Video Games Improve Attention

When we want to engage, believe me, we can. And not only will we then make fewer mistakes of perception, but we will become the types of focused, observant people that we may have thought we were incapable of becoming. Even children who have been diagnosed with ADHD can find themselves able to focus on certain things that grab them, that activate and engage their minds. Like video games. Time after time, video games have proven able to bring out the attentional resources in people that they n...
Folksonomies: attention video games
Folksonomies: attention video games
 2  2  notes

And that attentional improvement rolls over into other areas of life.

31 JAN 2012 by ideonexus

 We Should have a Saints Day for Penicillin

... we ought to have saints' days to commemorate the great discoveries which have been made for all mankind, and perhaps for all time—or for whatever time may be left to us. Nature ... is a prodigal of pain. I should like to find a day when we can take a holiday, a day of jubilation when we can fête good Saint Anaesthesia and chaste and pure Saint Antiseptic. ... I should be bound to celebrate, among others, Saint Penicillin...
Folksonomies: wonder medicine
Folksonomies: wonder medicine
  1  notes

A Quote from Winston Churchill on the need to celebrate medical discoveries that easy human suffering.

16 JAN 2012 by ideonexus

 The Eagerness of Medical Sciences are Detrimental

And it has been sarcastically said, that there is a wide difference between a good physician and a bad one, but a small difference between a good physician and no physician at all; by which it is meant to insinuate, that the mischievous officiousness of art does commonly more than counterbalance any benefit derivable from it.
Folksonomies: medicine medical doctors
Folksonomies: medicine medical doctors
  1  notes

The meddlesome nature of physicians means there is a small difference between having one and not having one help you.

02 JAN 2012 by ideonexus

 A Mastectomy Without Anesthesia

In September 1811 the Herschels’ old friend Fanny Burney, by then the married Madame d’Arblay, underwent an agonising operation for breast cancer without anaesthetic. It was carried out by an outstanding French military surgeon, Dominique Larrey, in Paris, and so successfully concluded that she lived for another twenty years. What is even more remarkable, Fanny Burney remained conscious throughout the entire operation, and subsequently wrote a detailed account of this experience, watching...
Folksonomies: surgery horror dark ages
Folksonomies: surgery horror dark ages
  1  notes

Fanny Burney's horrific account of undergoing surgery to have a breast removed.