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" Please stand up and be acknowledge. Brag all you want. If it weren't for this site I would have no knowledge about Cushings except for a picture of "me" in an old medical text book. The only thing in that book was a picture of a lady that could have been my twin and 2 paragraphs with some symptoms and the word "rare". Every doctor that I have met to date still uses that word. I appreciate and applaud you for all you do. Thank you. "
Trisha
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Home
Cushing's Help and Support
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Have an appointment with the doctor? Tips show what to ask |
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Good general info for anyone, no matter what symptoms or disease you may have. by John Beale Good communication between patients and their health-care practitioners is essential for good care. To help older adults better communicate with their health-care providers, the American Geriatrics Society's Foundation for Health in Aging has released a new, easily understandable tip sheet. The tip sheet, "How to Talk to Your Healthcare Practitioner: Tips on Improving Patient-Practitioner Communication," outlines steps older adults and their caregivers can take before, during and after a visit to a practitioner. These steps help ensure practitioners, older patients and their caregivers get the information they need. The tip sheet is available online at: http://www.healthinaging.org/public_education/communication_tips.php . |
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Read more: Have an appointment with the doctor? Tips show what to ask
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Robin Smith (staticnrg) submitted 'Paying It Forward in the Digital Age: Patient Empowerment 2.0 Using Web 2.0' |
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Robin (staticnrg) submitted an abstract to Medicine 2.0. Medicine 2.0 is the annual open, international conference on Web 2.0 applications in health and medicine, also known as the World Congress on Social Networking and Web 2.0 Applications in Medicine, Health, Health Care, and Biomedical Research. This conference distinguishes itself from "Health 2.0" tradeshows by having an academic form and focus, with an open call for presentations, published proceedings and peer-reviewed abstracts (although there is also a non-peer reviewed practice and business track), and being the only conference in this field which has a global perspective and an international audience (last year there were participants from 18 countries). An academic approach to the topic also means that we aim to look "beyond the health 2.0 hype", trying to identify the evidence on what works and what doesn't, and have open and honest discussions. This year's conference will be held in Toronto, Canada and will be attended by - Academics (health professionals, social scientists, computer scientists, engineers)
- Software and Web 2.0 application developers
- Consultants, vendors, venture capitalists, business leaders, CIOs
- End-users (health professionals, consumers, payors)
Robin's abstract was submitted and accepted! WooHoo! 'Paying It Forward in the Digital Age: Patient Empowerment 2.0 Using Web 2.0' |
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Last Updated ( Monday, 22 June 2009 10:08 )
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Read more: Robin Smith (staticnrg) submitted 'Paying It Forward in the Digital Age: Patient Empowerment 2.0 Using Web 2.0'
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This project was started in June 2008 and put on hold due to several "life issues", one of them being the enormous amount of time it takes to apply for non-profit status. Here are some of the thoughts and ideas that will be in the book when finished, hopefully by December 2009. MaryO: some people have articles on the website like http://www.cushings-help.com/helpful_hints.htm and these: |
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Last Updated ( Friday, 29 May 2009 11:01 )
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Read more: Upcoming Cushing's Book
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Diagnosing Cushing’s syndrome |
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From http://www.onmedica.com/NewsArticle.aspx?id=bed82431-f024-423e-bd4c-7dc0a4fcfbd6 Louise Newson, general practitioner, Solihull. Reviewed by Andrew Krenz, endocrinologist, Southampton. Tuesday, 19 May 2009. Key learning points - The commonest cause of Cushing’s syndrome is iatrogenic
- 2% of obese, poorly controlled patients with type 2 diabetes diabetes type 2 diabetics may have Cushing’s syndrome
- Various biochemical tests are needed for diagnosis; this is complex and requires specialist expertise.
- The underlying cause of Cushing’s syndrome needs to be determined
- Treatment and prognosis depend on the underlying cause.
- Surgery is the treatment of choice for Cushing’s disease i.e. pituitary-dependent
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 19 May 2009 09:11 )
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Read more: Diagnosing Cushing’s syndrome
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