Here’s a nice data-review in the Harvard Health News about the role of optimism and health. This article is a good summary of several large studies on whether having a better outlook on life can help your health. It is a long article (four online dense pages), so here, for all you Doc Gurley readers, […]
August 4th, 2008 | Category: Feature, Uncategorized |
- (Comments are closed) It was with bated breath (and unruly paparazzi) that we awaited the arrival of the worlds’ most famous orange, plastic, pediatric brain-tumor-awareness-advocating lobster. That’s right, we’re talking about none other than the uber-cool Zippy The Lobster! And he’s here at Doc Gurley headquarters (fanfare blares, confetti falls, fans swoon)! Zippy arrived in his entourage-hat with […]
July 12th, 2008 | Category: Feature, In the News, Practical Medicine, Uncategorized |
Comments are closed
Run (don’t walk) your fingers over to click on this link to a great article by Jane Gross of the New York Times. In it, she spells out four major steps she wishes she’d done differently when her mother was failing at home. Today more and more Americans are the sandwich generation, and, like […]
July 1st, 2008 | Category: Uncategorized |
Comments are closed It’s time again for the Medical Grand Rounds roundup. This time it is held at The Covert Rationing blog and has a Fourth of July theme. Expect lots of fireworks from this collection of posts from the medical blogosphere!
This is a public service announcement: To our viewing audience – stay tuned while we attempt to reanimate your host. Doc Gurley learned today that Dave Barry (himself!) answered two (count them, two) of her Dave Barry for President Forum questions, and, faced with a double Dave, she did what any self-respecting fan possessing a […]
June 3rd, 2008 | Category: Uncategorized |
Comments are closed Grand Rounds is up! The Happy Hospitalist leads us through another week of the best from medical blogs – and he’s taking the opportunity to prove that there are six (or less) degrees of separation. In our case there are three…
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