martes, 15 de marzo de 2011

Hospital San José implementa Wi-Fi para pacientes hospitalizados


 
 

Hospital San José implementa Wi-Fi para pacientes hospitalizados
14 de marzo de 2011  15h00  actualizado a las 15h11

comentarios
4

El pasado 11 de marzo se implementó la red inalámbrica Wi-Fi en todos los pisos de hospitalización del Complejo Hospitalario San José, entregando con ello la posibilidad de que los pacientes que se encuentran hospitalizados puedan conectarse vía Internet y con ello poder navegar o comunicarse con sus respectivas familias.
Esta iniciativa convierte al Hospital en uno de los primeros establecimientos públicos en entregar este servicio gratuito para sus pacientes en Chile, que se enmarca bajo el concepto de "Paciente Amigo".
Marcos Herrera, paciente del sexto piso de la Unidad de Medicina, señaló "encuentro esta iniciativa muy buena ya que me permite estar conectado a mi familia y mis amigos, y también puedo navegar por las principales redes sociales. A las personas que trabajamos y que estamos hospitalizados nos permite comunicarnos, así no te sientes tan aislado".
Terra Chile

Otra buena razón para tomar café


Publicada: 14 marzo 2011 | Comentar  0 | Imprimir  | Enviar Enviar a un amigo | Disminuye un punto el textoRegresa el texto a su tamaño originalAumenta el tamaño del texto un punto  
Otra buena razón para tomar café
Menos accidentes cerebrovasculares en quienes lo beben

70Share

DALLAS (AP).- Las mujeres que beben a diario una taza de café logran un beneficio adicional: tendrían menos riesgo de sufrir un accidente cerebrovascular, de acuerdo con un estudio de investigadores suecos.

Las mujeres que consumen a diario al menos una taza de café tienen entre 22 y 25 por ciento menos probabilidades de sufrir un ataque de apoplejía en comparación con las que lo beben en poca cantidad o nada.

"Las bebedoras de café deben sentirse felices", considera la doctora Sharonne N. Hayes, cardióloga de la Clínica Mayo en Rochester, Minnesota.

"El café es presentado a menudo como potencialmente malo para el corazón, pero en verdad no existe estudio alguno que afirme de manera convincente que es perjudicial. Quienes toman café tal vez se hacen cierto bien y posiblemente ningún daño".

Sin embargo, la doctora Hayes y demás especialistas afirman que el estudio no debe llevar a las mujeres que no consumen la bebida a salir corriendo a la cafetería que les quede más cercana.

El estudio no muestra que el café reduzca el riesgo de sufrir un accidente cerebrovascular, sólo que las mujeres que lo consumen tienden a presentar un riesgo menor de padecerlo.

Las conclusiones fueron difundidas por la revista "Stroke".
 
En contexto:
Estudio | Café

No fumar y un peso saludable son opciones probadas contra el accidente cerebrovascular.

Relación

"Este tipo de estudios (como el del café) son convincentes pero no muestran la existencia de una causal", aclara David S. Seres, del Colegio de Médicos y Cirujanos de la Universidad de Columbia.

Better Brain Wiring Linked to Family Genes


Better Brain Wiring Linked to Family Genes

ScienceDaily (Mar. 15, 2011) — How well our brain functions is largely based on our family's genetic makeup, according to a University of Melbourne led study. The study published in The Journal of Neuroscience provides the first evidence of a genetic effect on how 'cost-efficient' our brain network wiring is, shedding light on some of the brain's make up.
Lead author Dr Alex Fornito from the Melbourne Neuropsychiatry Centre at the University of Melbourne said the findings have important implications for understanding why some people are better able to perform certain tasks than others and the genetic basis of mental illnesses and some neurological diseases.
He said how the brain's network is organized has been a mystery to scientists for years. "The brain is an extraordinarily complex network of billions of nerve cells interconnected by trillions of fibers," he said.
"The brain tries to maximize its bang-for-buck by striking a balance between making more connections to promote efficient communication and minimizing the "cost" or amount of wiring required to make these connections. Our findings indicate that this balance, called 'cost-efficiency', has a strong genetic basis."
"Ultimately, this research may help us uncover which specific genes are important in explaining differences in cognitive abilities, risk for mental illness and neurological diseases such as schizophrenia and Alzheimer's disease, leading to new gene-based therapies for these disorders."
"Although genes play a major role in brain function, the environment and other factors contribute to when things go wrong in cases of mental illness and other brain disorders," he said.
The research team, which included scientists at the Universities of Queensland and Cambridge, UK compared the brain scans of 38 identical and 26 non-identical twins from the Australian Twin Registry.
Using new techniques, the researchers were able to construct detailed maps of each person's brain network and measured the cost-efficiency of network connections for the entire brain, as well as for specific brain regions.
"We found that people differed greatly in terms of how cost-efficient the functioning of their brain networks were, and that over half of these differences could be explained by genes," said Dr Fornito.
Across the entire brain, more than half (60%) of the differences between people could be explained by genes. Some of the strongest effects were observed for regions of the prefrontal cortex which play a vital role in planning, strategic thinking, decision-making and memory.
Previous work has shown that people with more efficient brain connections score higher on tests of intelligence, and that brain network cost-efficiency is reduced in people with schizophrenia, particularly in the prefrontal cortex.
"This exciting discovery opens up a whole new area of research focus for scientists around the world," he said.
Email or share this story:

Story Source:
The above story is reprinted (with editorial adaptations by ScienceDaily staff) from materials provided by University of Melbourne.

Journal Reference:
  1. A. Fornito, A. Zalesky, D. S. Bassett, D. Meunier, I. Ellison-Wright, M. Yucel, S. J. Wood, K. Shaw, J. O'Connor, D. Nertney, B. J. Mowry, C. Pantelis, E. T. Bullmore. Genetic Influences on Cost-Efficient Organization of Human Cortical Functional NetworksJournal of Neuroscience, 2011; 31 (9): 3261 DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4858-10.2011

Science Times: Animals


Science Times: Animals
Animals and people. We have always been bound together. Humans are animals, after all. And each new bit of scientific research adds weight and complexity to our genetic intimacy, not just with primates, but with distant relatives like fruit flies and sponges. We share behaviors. We share homes and habitats. We consume each other. Mostly we eat them, a moral quandary for many people. But we still do feed multitudes of parasites, mosquitoes and the odd shark. This issue of Science Times is devoted to our many bonds with animals, and also to the distance between us and them. No other animal makes operas or nuclear weapons. How did we become so different? What made us human?
Jason Holley
Animals and people. We have always been bound together. Humans are animals, after all. And each new bit of scientific research adds weight and complexity to our genetic intimacy, not just with primates, but with distant relatives like fruit flies and sponges. We share behaviors. We share homes and habitats. We consume each other. Mostly we eat them, a moral quandary for many people. But we still do feed multitudes of parasites, mosquitoes and the odd shark. This issue of Science Times is devoted to our many bonds with animals, and also to the distance between us and them. No other animal makes operas or nuclear weapons. How did we become so different? What made us human?
Christopher Silas Neal

The Creature Connection

Our love for animals can be traced to our capacity to infer the mental states of others, which archaeological evidence suggests emerged more than 50,000 ago.

From Single Cells, a Vast Kingdom Arose

The beginning of animals is one of the more mysterious episodes in the history of life, and intermediate species are extinct.
ESSAY

No Face, but Plants Like Life Too

Vegetable behavior, and other ruminations on what we kill so we can eat.

Supremacy of a Social Network

The ability to cooperate, to make individuals subordinate their strong sense of self-interest to the needs of the group, lies at the root of human achievement.

Emotional Power Broker of the Modern Family

Pets alter not only a family’s routines but also its hierarchy, social rhythm and web of relationships.
A polydactyl “Hemingway cat.”

For Whom the Cell Mutates: The Origins of Genetic Quirks

While the origins of the cats at Hemingway’s longtime home in Key West, Fla., remain murky, the cause of their polydactyly is no longer a mystery.
Earthquake in Japan
The No. 3 reactor building of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant burned Monday after a blast following an earthquake and tsunami in this satellite image.

Japan Faces Potential Nuclear Disaster as Radiation Levels Rise

Japan faced the likelihood of a catastrophic nuclear accident after an explosion further damaged one of the crippled reactors and a fire at another spewed large amounts of radioactive material into the air.

A Look at the Mechanics of a Partial Meltdown

Fuel rods must be completely covered in cooling water if they are not to overheat, but overheating does not immediately lead to actual melting.

INTERACTIVE FEATURE: How Shifting Plates Caused the Earthquake and Tsunami in Japan

Diagram and maps showing what caused the Japan earthquake and tsunami.

INTERACTIVE MAP: Map of the Damage From the Japanese Earthquake

An interactive map and photographs of places in Japan that were damaged by the March 11 earthquake and subsequent tsunami.

INTERACTIVE FEATURE: How a Reactor Shuts Down and What Happens in a Meltdown

What happens to a reactor in a meltdown.

Quake Moves Japan Closer to U.S. and Alters Earth’s Spin

The unbuckling of two tectonic plates shifted Japan’s coastline by up to 13 feet, and a 250-mile-long section dropped in altitude by about two feet.
More Science News

Physicist’s Jailing Is Veiled in Mystery

More than 500 days after Adlène Hicheur, a French-Algerian scientist, was detained by French authorities, no charges have been brought.
SMARTER THAN YOU THINK

Poker Bots Invade Online Gambling

Card-playing software is now good enough to win tens of thousands of dollars on major poker sites, and human players aren’t happy about it.