Thursday, May 17, 2007

Tides Need Moon Words



--Tides Need Moon--

Tides need moon for motion,
Waves want wind to be.
Politicians make decisions;
They need currency.

Shoots need sun to shoot up.
Roots reach but need earth.
Laissez-faire needs freedom,
As do I--for mirth!

I call for salty looseness
Of Gibraltar gales and hues,
And repartee, and severance
From small and tiny views.

.MGW.

Chinese Typhoon Words

Modeling Typhoon Risk in China




Nowhere else in the world are typhoons more frequent than off China’s coast, in the Northwest Pacific basin.

The word typhoon stems from the Chinese JuFeng which originated in 5th century Chinese literature to mean “scary wind.” While typhoons in China certainly cause significant wind damage, the torrential rainfalls that accompany many typhoons also cause considerable damage from flooding. At work these days, I'm writing articles that provide an overview of China’s typhoon hazard, as well as the vulnerability of the Chinese building stock to typhoon-induced wind and flood.


.MGW.

Friday, May 04, 2007

Old Complications Rising Words








Old Complications on the Rise:
Anesthesiologists, Are we as good as we think?

[Will post in full after published in Anesthesiology News]

Despite vast improvements in surgical and anesthetic practice, a new trio of studies makes it appear that anesthesiology may have a ways to go. Advances in technology have seemingly contributed to increases in old anesthesia-related complications. At least, that's what these findings—highlighted by three abstracts presented in March at the International Anesthesia Research Society's (IARS) 81rst Congress—would initially suggest.

The abstracts, each based on a database of more than 37,000,000 patients assembled by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), discussed rising trends in three areas: postoperative respiratory failure (PORF), anesthetic complications, and postoperative septic shock (POSS). The first complication, PORF, actually doubled from 1994 to 2003, increasing from two to four percent.

“We would not have anticipated an increase in PORF, let alone one so pronounced,” said this study’s lead author, Mark Nunnally, MD, an anesthesiologist at The University of Chicago, where all three studies were based. “Our effort now is directed at uncovering as much as we can about why this finding exists in a database this size.”

Recent investigations have associated increased PORF with age; patients over 45 are more susceptible. Other contributing factors have included patient incomes below $25,000, care from non-metropolitan hospitals, and use of Medicare or Medicaid versus private insurance.

As anesthesiologists consider why PORF and other old complications are getting worse, one point seems clear: surgical and anesthetic techniques are not to blame...


.MGW.