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...time lag and no phone tag.” The researchers found that doctors who practiced within academic centers and Health Maintenance Organizations were more frequent IT users than their colleagues in smaller practices. Eric G. Campbell, an assistant professor at the Institute for Health Policy and a co-author of the study, did not find the results to be indicative of a problem in the medical profession. “I personally hate e-mail,” Campbell said. “In today’s electronic culture, we assume that if a technology is widely used...

Author: By Nan Ni, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Few Doctors Use IT, Survey Says | 10/5/2006 | See Source »

...sudden about-face in Europe's policy of "appeasement" toward "intolerant" Islam, says Bawer, Europe faces "a long twilight of Balkanization with Europe divided into warring pockets of Muslims and non-Muslims." A new best-selling volume from Denmark titled Islamists and the Naive strikes a similar chord. Its co-author, Karen Jespersen, is a former Interior Minister with Denmark's Social Democrats, a party often associated with policies friendly to Muslim immigrants. The threat posed by Muslim fundamentalism in the 21st century is comparable, Jespersen writes, to the twin scourges of the past century, Nazism and communism - other forms...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Believe It Or Not | 10/1/2006 | See Source »

Royal is also willing to capitalize on her pulchritude. "Her strategy, which she exercises with no scruples, is one of seduction, and that's a new thing in French politics," says Rgine Lemoine-Darthois, co-author of a recent book about women of Royal's generation titled An Age Called Desire. "She holds up a mirror to French women that they find very agreeable: to knock men dead while being a woman of power. She's proof that you don't have to abandon your femininity to make it." At a campaign meeting in Paris earlier this year...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Woman Who Would Be France's President | 10/1/2006 | See Source »

...cardiovascular system, we were surprised by how robust and definitive the data was.” According to Kubzansky, decline in lung function is an early marker for many other prognoses, such as heart disease and Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disorder. Harvard Professor of Medicine Scott T. Weiss, a co-author on the study, said that “the longitudinal character of the study is significant, because it allowed us to observe changing lung function over time, whereas the previous studies of this sort conducted were cross-sectional and therefore limited to the present state.” According...

Author: By Nan Ni, CONTRIBUTING WRITERS | Title: Hostility Linked To Lung Disease | 9/27/2006 | See Source »

...faced a 44 percent greater risk of diabetes and a 16 percent greater risk of coronary disease when compared to those not receiving the hormones. “Patients and physicians need to be aware of the elevated risk as they make treatment decisions,” said study co-author Nancy Keating, an assistant professor of health care policy and medicine at Harvard Medical School. The American Cancer Society estimates that one in six American men are diagnosed with prostate cancer during their lifetimes, making it the most common form of cancer among American men. The society predicts that...

Author: By Clifford M. Marks, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Cancer Therapy Elevates Risk of Disease | 9/25/2006 | See Source »

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