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THCB 20th Birthday Classic:  As I’ve always suspected, Health Care = Communism + Frappuccinos
By MATTHEW HOLT Our 20th birthday continues with a few classics coming out. Back in 2005 I was really cutting a lyrical rug, and would never miss a chance to get that Cambridge training in Marxism into use. This essay about whether health care should be a public or private good has always been one of my favorites, even if I’m not sure Starbucks is still making Frappuccinos. And 18 years later the basic point of this essay remains true, even if many of you will not have a clue who Vioxx or Haliburton were or why they mattered back then! Those of you who think I’m an unreconstructed commie will correctly suspec...
Source: The Health Care Blog - August 15, 2023 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: matthew holt Tags: Health Policy Matthew Holt Communism Frappuccinos Source Type: blogs

Podcast Episode Recommendation: Healthy Dose of Dialogue Episode 31 " A Dose of Prescription Drug Disruption "
Today, I am recommending a podcast episode worth listening to. Specifically, it is an episode from June 15, 2022 of the podcast known as " Healthy Dose of Dialogue " which describes its mission to " gather the brightest minds in healthcare to share their unique perspectives on transformative marketplace trends, industry insights, and their vision for the future " .This particular episode (EP31: " A Dose of Prescription Drug Disruption " ) is an interview with the President of CivicaScript LLC, which in case you weren ' t aware of it, is an affiliated business unit of the nonprofit drug company Civica, Inc. The president of...
Source: Scott's Web Log - August 9, 2023 Category: Endocrinology Tags: 2023 Biosimilar Civica Civica Rx CivicaRx CivicaScript insulin podcast podcast episode recommendations ypsomed Source Type: blogs

Bacteriophages to Diagnose and Treat Bladder Infections
Researchers at ETH Zurich have developed a bacteriophage system to identify and treat bacterial bladder infections. Bacteriophages are viruses that infect bacteria, but these microorganisms have fallen out of favor as a treatment method for infection...
Source: Medgadget - August 8, 2023 Category: Medical Devices Authors: Conn Hastings Tags: Medicine Public Health Urology bacteriophages ETH ETH_en Source Type: blogs

Fight Aging! Newsletter, July 24th 2023
In this study, we tested the hypothesis that periodontal disease (PD) as a source of infection alters inflammatory activation and Aβ phagocytosis by the microglial cells. Experimental PD was induced using ligatures in C57BL/6 mice for 1, 10, 20, and 30 days to assess the progression of PD. Animals without ligatures were used as controls. Ligature placement caused progressive periodontal disease and bone resorption that was already significant on day 1 post-ligation and continued to increase until day 30. The severity of periodontal disease increased the frequency of activated microglia in the brains on day 30 by 36...
Source: Fight Aging! - July 23, 2023 Category: Research Authors: Reason Tags: Newsletters Source Type: blogs

The Short-Term Economic Argument for Undertaking Efforts to Treat Aging as a Medical Condition
The primary economic argument presently made for treating aging as a medical condition emerges from the fact that medical spending and medical research is largely entwined with government in much of the world; it is increasingly a public purse, not a collection of private purses. Politicians and bureaucrats care (to some degree) about avoiding the looming financial implosion that will result when present unsustainable spending policies run head-on into the demographic transition to a society in which an ever-larger proportion of people are old, suffering from age-related disease, and many of their expenses paid via entitle...
Source: Fight Aging! - July 20, 2023 Category: Research Authors: Reason Tags: Activism, Advocacy and Education Source Type: blogs

Altis Labs Raises US $6 Million in Seed Funding Co-Led by Debiopharm and Benchstrength to Advance AI Platform for Clinical Trials
Debiopharm Innovation Fund and Benchstrength Co-Lead Seed Funding Round Supporting Altis’ AI-Powered Imaging Biomarker Platform Altis Labs, Inc. (Altis), the computational imaging company accelerating clinical trials with artificial intelligence, today announces the closing of its US $6 million seed financing. Benchstrength and Debiopharm Innovation Fund co-led the round with participation from strategic angels including Doug Foster, the former CEO at digital health company Verana Health, and Richard Gliklich, MD, the Founder and CEO at real-world data company OM1. “We are thrilled to partner with Benchstrength and Deb...
Source: EMR and HIPAA - July 14, 2023 Category: Information Technology Authors: Healthcare IT News Tags: Health IT Company Healthcare IT Altis Labs Bayer Pharmaceuticals Benchstrength Carolina Haefliger MD Debiopharm Debiopharm Innovation Fund Doug Foster Felix Baldauf-Lenschen Health IT Funding Health IT Fundings Health IT Investment Source Type: blogs

Psychedelic Science 2023 – Film Festival Day
I love how friendly and open the vibe is here at Psychedelic Science 2023 in Denver. As we were heading down the elevator in our hotel yesterday, we got to chatting with an enthusiastic attendee on the way out. She told us they had to cap registrations at 11,500 and turn away 70 interested vendors. That doesn’t surprise me. We’re clearly in a wave of surging interest in psychedelics. I’m here because I’m keenly interested to learn more about the potential for using psychedelics for self-development. I’ve only done a few psychedelic journeys so far, and I’d say there’s a 99% chan...
Source: Steve Pavlina's Personal Development Blog - June 21, 2023 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Steve Pavlina Tags: Creating Reality Lifestyle Source Type: blogs

Free Download of The Capitol Forum ' s Report: " Exclusive Drug Dealing: Anticompetitive Practices in the Pharmaceutical Supply Chain "
In 2020, I wrote a blog post entitled " It ' s the Rx rebates, stupid! " (seehttps://blog.sstrumello.com/2020/09/its-rx-rebates-stupid.html for the post) in which I revealed the reason everyone was overpaying for insulin was because of rebating paid by insulin-makers to secure PBM formulary placement. Novo Nordisk revealed to its investors that it was spending 74% of its gross U.S. sales in the form of legally-exempted rebate kickbacks paid to PBMs. The good news is thanks to a series of actions by a number of different parties, the insulin PBM rebate price bubble finally burst whenLilly, followed byNovo Nordisk and thenSa...
Source: Scott's Web Log - June 11, 2023 Category: Endocrinology Tags: 2023 Exclusive Drug Dealing: Anticompetitive Practices in the Pharmaceutical Supply Chain report The Capitol Forum Source Type: blogs

Fight Aging! Newsletter, June 5th 2023
In conclusion, higher BMR might reduce lifespan. The underlying pathways linking to major causes of death and relevant interventions warrant further investigation. Betting Against Progress Turns Out Poorly, But Can Work in the Short Term in a Slow Field https://www.fightaging.org/archives/2023/06/betting-against-progress-turns-out-poorly-but-can-work-in-the-short-term-in-a-slow-field/ Setting oneself up as a spokesperson for "we will not achieve this goal", as the fellow noted here is choosing to do, is a bet against technological progress. A glance at any few decade period in the past two hundred year...
Source: Fight Aging! - June 4, 2023 Category: Research Authors: Reason Tags: Newsletters Source Type: blogs

Betting Against Progress Turns Out Poorly, But Can Work in the Short Term in a Slow Field
Setting oneself up as a spokesperson for "we will not achieve this goal", as the fellow noted here is choosing to do, is a bet against technological progress. A glance at any few decade period in the past two hundred years suggests that such a bet will almost certainly fail in time, sometimes quite rapidly. In highly regulated fields that move as slowly as is the case for medicine, however, one can profitably continue to be a skeptic for quite some time. While progress is rapid and impressive in the lab and in animal studies, a skeptic can continue to shrug and point to the lack of human therapies. This is the resul...
Source: Fight Aging! - June 1, 2023 Category: Research Authors: Reason Tags: Healthy Life Extension Community Source Type: blogs

Machine Learning Aids Rapid Design of Protein Therapeutics
Researchers at Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) in Switzerland have created a machine learning approach to scan millions of protein fragments and assess their structure and binding properties. Based on the surface chemistry and geome...
Source: Medgadget - May 17, 2023 Category: Medical Devices Authors: Conn Hastings Tags: Medicine EPFL machine learning Source Type: blogs

High-Throughput Testing of Hundreds of Anti-Cancer Drug Combinations
Researchers at ETH Zurich in Switzerland have developed a high-throughput screening method for anti-cancer drugs that they have called “pharmascopy”. To date, the researchers have tested the system with multiple myeloma samples, a cancer ...
Source: Medgadget - May 11, 2023 Category: Medical Devices Authors: Conn Hastings Tags: Medicine Oncology ETH Zurich ethz Nature Cancer Source Type: blogs

Antibiotic Susceptibility Testing Using Simple Microscope and Smartphone
Researchers at Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) in Switzerland have developed a simple and rapid technique to assess the antibiotic susceptibility of bacterial samples. At present, this is time consuming and inefficient, often leadin...
Source: Medgadget - May 8, 2023 Category: Medical Devices Authors: Conn Hastings Tags: Medicine Source Type: blogs

From tragedy to advocacy: a journey through medical errors PODCAST
Subscribe to The Podcast by KevinMD. Catch up on old episodes! In this episode, Alisa Sano, a public health research assistant, shares her personal story of loss and the impact of medical errors on families. We will explore the complexities of the health care system, including the “swiss cheese model” and authority gradient, and the Read more… From tragedy to advocacy: a journey through medical errors [PODCAST] originally appeared in KevinMD.com.
Source: Kevin, M.D. - Medical Weblog - March 13, 2023 Category: General Medicine Authors: Tags: Podcast Hospital-Based Medicine Malpractice Source Type: blogs

Top 8 Most Controversial Stories About Medical Innovations
I spend my days monitoring progress, analysing new trends, and learning about spectacular new initiatives. Needless to say: not just me, but the whole team of The Medical Futurist is fascinated by what we learn. And then sometimes there is a story that just melts the fuses at one or more team members – and our readers.  Below I picked 8 of our favourite controversial stories from – almost exclusively – this year. It’s important to note that controversial doesn’t equal bad/useless. Sometimes it’s just not widely accepted (yet) and so exotic that they can surely provide a unique talking point at a...
Source: The Medical Futurist - December 13, 2022 Category: Information Technology Authors: Andrea Koncz Tags: TMF 3d printing AI artificial intelligence bioprinting digital health CRISPR designer baby designer babies robotics in healthcare assisted dying DIY blood draw DIY blood test medical innovation deepfake Source Type: blogs