Difference between revisions of "Talk:Open Source Medicine"

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We should define what exactly this page is for; are we talking just about the restructuring of the healthcare system along more open, collaborative lines, or are we discussing actual treatments, or both?
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I can't figure out how to get the wiki to display a stub for the New Treatments page, so you can click thru to see the full article. (It can't be displayed in one column, because the da Vinci image doesn't fit, but resizing the da Vinci image kills the impact.) --[[User:Balatro|Balatro]] 19:54, 20 May 2010 (CEST)
 
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Telesurgery definitely deserves a mention here. Imagine you could be operated on by a specialist surgeon anywhere in the world. You just go into an operating theater with robots and a high-resolution camera and the surgeon operates the robots remotely. This is fully mature technology. Open collaboration makes this possible, as you have access to all the world's surgeons.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1681689/
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Telesurgery, but also fully robotic surgery won't be far behind.
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http://www.adciv.org/Image:DaVinci-Robot.jpg
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Interesting talk on robotic surgery: http://www.ted.com/talks/catherine_mohr_surgery_s_past_present_and_robotic_future.html
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These robots could be scaled down to the micro or nano level and controlled wirelessly from the outside. As Feynman said, "it would be interesting in surgery if you could swallow the surgeon"
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=Preventive medicine/ Public health=
 
=Preventive medicine/ Public health=

Revision as of 19:54, 20 May 2010

I can't figure out how to get the wiki to display a stub for the New Treatments page, so you can click thru to see the full article. (It can't be displayed in one column, because the da Vinci image doesn't fit, but resizing the da Vinci image kills the impact.) --Balatro 19:54, 20 May 2010 (CEST)

Preventive medicine/ Public health

Medicine is not just about diagnosis and treatment – what about compliance and prevention? How does a culture make people eat more healthily, for example?
We sorta have the answers to Alzheimer's (meditation and turmeric), cancer (anti-angiogenic foods, garlic, turmeric), osteoporosis (weightbearing exercise, calcium and vitamin D), cardiovascular disease (omega-3, avoiding saturated fat, exercise), type-II diabetes (exercise, avoiding sugar), lung cancer (the obvious) and other degenerative diseases.
Healthcare could be massively unburdened by a change in attitude, by people taking more responsibility. But people don't. A world where people eat a lot of fruit and vegetables, exercise two hours a week and meditate would be a world with maybe a quarter as much degenerative disease. I do not currently have any particular suggestions on how this might be achieved.