Hits of the week past
Category: Genetics & genomics (incl behav genetics)
The week's best -- with new features!
Posted by David Dobbs at 2:14 PM • 0 Comments • 0 TrackBacks
Now on ScienceBlogs: Oh, no! School wi-fi is making our kids sick! (2012 edition)
David Dobbs on science, nature, and culture.
I write articles on science, medicine, nature, culture and other matters for the New York Times Magazine, The Atlantic, Slate, National Geographic, Scientific American Mind, and other publications, and am working on my fourth book, The Orchid and the Dandelion, which expands on my recent December 2009 Atlantic article. In August 2010, I'll be moving to London for a year to work on the book. I'll also serve as a senior fellow at City University London's MA science journalism program.
You're encouraged to check out my third book Reef Madness: Charles Darwin, Alexander Agassiz, and the Meaning of Coral, which traces the strangest but most forgotten controversy in Darwin's career; subscribe to Neuron Culture by email; see more of my work at my main website; or track Twitter feed, my Google Reader shared items, or my Tumblr log, which gets it all.
Category: Genetics & genomics (incl behav genetics)
The week's best -- with new features!
Posted by David Dobbs at 2:14 PM • 0 Comments • 0 TrackBacks
Category: Journalism & media
I think it helps to have a sense of the history of science, which embeds in a writer or observer a sense of critical distance and an eye for large forces at work beneath the surface. Machinations in government surprise no one who has studied the history of government and politics. Likewise with science.
Posted by David Dobbs at 11:16 AM • 3 Comments • 0 TrackBacks
Category: Healthcare policy
I can only hope he'll as vigorously ask people such as Mitt Romney what exactly is wrong with offering more attractive insurance options to the almost 75 million people who are un- or under-insured.
Posted by David Dobbs at 3:05 PM • 0 Comments • 0 TrackBacks
Category: Healthcare policy
At a time when we are much concerned with reducing PTSD in combat troops, it's valuable to learn that we could apparentlly cut the PTSD rate by more than 50% simply by keeping the least healthy 15% -- as measured by fairly simple health questionnaires we already have in any and -- out of combat zones. So why is this study going almost completely ignored?
Posted by David Dobbs at 4:00 PM • 3 Comments • 0 TrackBacks
Category: Public health
Speaking of pleasure: Having lived with fire ants, stepped in fire ants, laid down with fire ants, and been bit just about everywhere by fire ants, this pleases me immensely: Parasitic flies turn fire ants them into zombies. The fly maggots eat their brains.
Posted by David Dobbs at 3:12 PM • 0 Comments • 0 TrackBacks
Category: Public health
This gets at the deep, deep problem created by allowing pharma to dominant drug testing data while we lack the ability to collect information on how well various drug and other treatments actually work in clinical practice.
Posted by David Dobbs at 12:02 PM • 3 Comments • 0 TrackBacks
Category: Medicine
While approaching an intersection you see a truck on the intersecting road is fixing to run the stop sign and smash you. You slam on the brakes -- as the truck driver slams on his. You release the brakes and roll through unharmed. Have you overreacted?
Posted by David Dobbs at 3:38 PM • 2 Comments • 0 TrackBacks
Category: Science policy
A few of the better bits from the last 24 or so, on Mexico's response, how fast this might spread, and the possibility of a re-emergence in the autumn (a la 1918).
Posted by David Dobbs at 7:06 AM • 0 Comments • 0 TrackBacks
Category: Science policy
I'm guessing most everyone interested in swine flu already reads Effect Measure (as well you should; it was an invaluable resource in my reporting for my Slate piece on the mystery of the virulence of the outbreak in Mexico). But in case you haven't or are not, today's primer there on case fatality rates, virulence, and mortality would make an excellent start.
Posted by David Dobbs at 10:14 PM • 0 Comments • 0 TrackBacks
Category: Science policy
Of the two qualities vital to a nasty pandemic-- rapid spread and high mortality -- this a brand-new strain of swine flu, or H1N1, seems to possess the first: Evidence is high that it spreads readily among humans. But how deadly is it? Despite the 100+ deaths in Mexico, we don't really know.
Posted by David Dobbs at 3:22 PM • 7 Comments • 0 TrackBacks
Tim Lambert 02.01.2012
ERV 11.26.2011
Jason Rosenhouse 02.12.2012
Orac 12.12.2011
Orac 01.26.2012