Alcoholism after gastric bypass: Is it in your mind or gut? » Scienceline

In 2012, a large study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association reported that the percentage of patients abusing alcohol increased from 7.6 percent before surgery to 9.6 percent two years after surgery — that’s potentially an additional 2,000 alcoholics each year in the United States. Since then, a growing body of evidence has corroborated these findings. The longest-running study suggests the effect persists even a decade after surgery.

via Alcoholism after gastric bypass: Is it in your mind or gut? » Scienceline.

What Doctors are Thinking

Underwriters take note and read the entire article, especially the section on pattern recognition.

notdeaddinosaur's avatarMusings of a Dinosaur

Ever wonder what your doctor is thinking while taking your history? If we’re doing it right, we’re looking at you instead of a computer. We’re making appropriate eye contact while displaying welcoming body language. And we’re letting you tell your story with as few interruptions as possible. Clearly we are listening intently, but did you ever wonder what’s going through our minds while you’re speaking?

I’ve been thinking about this lately in the context of teaching medical students about history-taking. They’re being taught all the right questions to ask and how to ask them (body language, open-ended, etc) but it often seems like they don’t know what they’re supposed to be listening for, or how to elicit the kind of information that will let them make a diagnosis (which is, of course, the necessary prerequisite for appropriate treatment.)

So here’s an analogy to try and help both patients and learners…

View original post 1,299 more words

Lower BMI Limit for T2D Screening for Asian Americans – Medpage Today

Hsu and colleagues made this determination based on the scientific literature, citing the distribution of adipose tissue as the explanation. Asian Americans tend to store excess weight around the waistline, where fat storage has been associated with higher risk for insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes, compared with peripheral fat stores in the legs and arms.

via Lower BMI Limit for T2D Screening for Asian Americans | Medpage Today.

I’m screwed.