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Death by prescription: Doctors' handwriting causes 7,000 deaths a year

Publié par Unknown


The jokes about physicians and their sloppy handwriting are age-old and more or less contented among doctors themselves. But for some people it is not funny at all. A misread prescription can lead to mistreatment and cause death.


In several countries the printed doctor prescription is pushed forward by policy makers as the safer option, as it not only provides clarity but also constitutes a data base of medication that the patient has taken over the years.

"It could be that the doctor is focusing on the diagnosis and medication more than on writing the prescription," argues Keya Shivadey, specialist Gynecologist and Obstetrician at Aster Medical Center.

In the UAE patients can ask for a print out of their prescription to be more secure. "I do give medications on print sometimes. But for the insurance company I still need to provide a written prescription.”

Although Keya says to have a very neat handwriting she agrees that sloppiness is evident among many doctors around her. "Thank God we have computers now and some doctors are prescribing the medication in print."

More than 100 doctors gathered in the state of Maharashtra, India last month to make a statement; bad handwriting of a physician is harmful.

According to non-profit organization Medscape India, which spearheads a campaign to address the issue, the number of fatal incidents due to unreadable prescriptions is internationally on the rise.

In fact, the Institute of Medicine (IOM) reported that the sloppy handwriting of physicians is responsible for 7,000 deaths each year.

"I do have a bad handwriting, but it never resulted in any problems," tells Saleem Moopen, Ophthalmologist at Aster Medical Center. "I sometimes receive phone calls when patients are at the pharmacy, and they cannot read what I have written."

As the patient is often not familiar with the jargon that is scrabbled on his note the onus is on the pharmacist, who is tasked with the challenge of deciphering the order for a certain medication. This is not an easy task, tells Usha, who has been working as a pharmacist at Aster Pharmacy for the past 5 years.

"Experience is a must," she says. "It takes about 3-4 year. Trainees have a difficult time. We advise them always to ask the doctor."

As the experience of the pharmacist increases, the ability to decipher the physician's handwriting grows. But this is something only the pharmacist will be able to do, as it requires primary knowledge about the medical background of the patient too.

"An experienced pharmacist will know what medicine the physician wanted to prescribe based on the diagnosis and the symptoms.

"Also the period of medication and the costs of the medicine tell you what kind of medication is prescribed. I can now decipher a prescription if I can read 2 or 3 letters, but for the patient it will be very difficult to read the prescription."

It is often claimed that the prescription is only meant for peers, who are specialized in deciphering the scrabbling because they most probably produce similar notes. Another joke says that while doctors are trained to write unreadable notes, pharmacists are trained to decipher them.

But it is not a good practice, admits Saleem. "I think you cannot not generalize and say that all doctors have a bad handwriting. But I think the majority of medical prescriptions are difficult to read. And actually it is not good if it is very bad handwriting. It should be readable. This does not only protect the patient but also the doctor, who might be accused of malpractice in case of wrong medication."

According to Saleem sloppy handwriting is often caused by a rush. "I have about 20 patients a day, and for every patients I have to write 2 to 3 pages for the insurance company. I have to write many long stories, and I have to do it fast. Then it turns from bad to worse."
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Japanese Photographer Takes Cutest Pictures of His 4-year-old Daughter

Publié par Unknown


Once a photographer becomes a parent – especially to a baby daughter – he no longer has to look for a model to work with. This was once again proved by Japanese photographer Toyokazu Nagano, taking just the most adorable photos of his youngest daughter, 4-year-old Kanna. The photo series is well described by its laconic name – My Daughter Kanna – as the girl and her natural charm is just enough to fill an entire frame. Each picture is taken on the same road, with little Kanna giving all of her into each pose and mood.

Even though each picture is enhanced with some cute costumes and props, like a a tiny piano, a plush panda, or a giant gelato tower, what draws you the most is how photogenic Kanna is, and what wild facial expressions she can pull off. The girl doesn’t seem to be the least bit intimidated by the camera, and seems to be especially fond of making some noise.

Toyokazu is not the first stand-out dad, taking cute photos of his daughter. A while ago, the Internet has been buzzing about Kayla and Kristin, photographed by their dad Jason Lee, shortly followed by Dave Engledow, calling himself “world’s best dad”. Then there was Emil Nystrom, photographing and photoshoping his daughter Singlhild’s pictures while she was still a toddler! Looks like the new generation is going to have the best childhood photo albums ever!













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7 Strange Museums in Amsterdam

Publié par Unknown


Amsterdam is a city of museums – there are more than 400 museums and art galleries within the city. It is said that no other city in the world has more museums than Amsterdam. Obviously, museums are among the main tourist attractions. The Rijksmuseum, Van Gogh Museum, Anne Frank House and the Stedelijk Museum are the most popular choices, but there are many interesting smaller museums. There are museums on coffee, spectacles, pianos, diamonds, cheese, beers, bags and purses that we featured earlier, and many more. Here are the most bizarre ones.

Museum Vrolik

Museum Vrolik houses a tremendous collection of pathological specimens, anomalous embryos, odd skulls and bones, and other anatomical abnormalities, put together by the Gerardus Vrolik (1755-1859), one of the most important Dutch scientist of its times. Willem Vrolik was a pioneer in the field of teratology - the study of deformities - a popular subject for anatomists in the 18th and 19th centuries. Willem published several monographs on teratological subjects and amassed thousands of specimen.

After the death of Willem Vrolik, the collection was purchased by a group of Dutch citizens and offered to the municipality of Amsterdam to be placed in an institution called Athenaeum Illustre, which became later University of Amsterdam. Today, the Museum Vrolik includes specimens from other collections, added through more than a century of its existence.








Torture Museum

The Torture Museum endeavors to document the history of the human cruelty. The museum artifacts are laid out in a maze of small, dark rooms, creating a somber atmosphere. The museum features a variety of interesting devices, from well known objects like the Guillotine, the rack and the stocks, to lesser know objects like thumb screws and the flute of shame. Other objects housed in the museum include the iron maiden, skull crusher, judas chair, Catherine Wheels and Scold's bridle. Some of the devices are genuine and antique, but many are modern reconstructions from old texts or books. Some displays are behind glass but many are situated in the open and can be touched.






Sex Museum

Situated near Amsterdam Central Station the Sex Museum attracts over 500.000 visitors each year. The museum houses a rich and interesting collection of objects about human sexuality: art as well as photographs, china figures, plates, and many other items, sometimes composed in a bit old-fashioned presentation. You will see the plaster figure of Venus at the entry and the full size wax figures of Mata Hari with her male partners and Marilyn Monroe. Hidden speakers emit different muffled noises including repetitive sounds of the steam machine, mixed with woman’s screams of joy.


Hash, Marihuana and Hemp Museum

The Hash, Marihuana and Hemp Museum is dedicated to cannabis and its many uses, offering visitors information about the historical and modern uses of cannabis for medicinal, religious and cultural purposes. The museum also focuses on how hemp can be used for agricultural and industrial purposes, even including clothing accessories and cosmetic products made from hemp fiber in their gift shop.

The museum includes a live cannabis garden in various stages of growth, pipe and roach clip collections, an 1836 Dutch Bible made of hemp, and many other accessories made from the industrial crop. The museum also contains artwork, including David Teniers the Younger's painting, Hemp-Smoking Peasants in a Smoke House (1660), and one of the fake I.D's of the famous cannabis smuggler Howard Marks.






Tattoo Museum

Opened in November of 2011, the Amsterdam Tattoo Museum is one of the newest museums. The museum covers the entire history of skin art and has artifacts from all over the world, including needles, old shop signs, photographs, flashes (ready-made designs), and freak show posters. Other items include macabre flesh exhibits in pickling jars. Some are pig skin, others, human – like the skin taken from the under-arm of a 19th-century whaler daubed with crude images of his sweetheart and Christ.

The museum has more than 40 thousands objects in its collection, started originally by Henk Schiffmacher, who is still a driving force behind the exhibit. The show is divided geographically - Africa, America, Oceania, Asia. In addition, the museum shows history of tattooing and the tattooing traditions in different social subcultures – in prisons, in the army, among sailors, among sex workers and more. Famous tattooists have been also celebrated. Several interiors important for the tattoo history, as workshops and tattoo clubs, have been reconstructed inside the museum.






KattenKabinet

The KattenKabinet or "Cat Cabinet" is entirely devoted to cats. Founded in 1990 by William Meijer, a wealthy Dutchman who in this way wanted to preserve the memory of his cat Tom also called after the American financier of the past - John Pierpont Morgan. The museum collection includes paintings, drawings, sculptures and other works of art by Pablo Picasso, Rembrandt, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Corneille, Sal Meijer, Théophile Steinlen, and Jože Ciuha, among others. Five exquisite cats also live at the museum premises


Dutch Funeral Museum

Established in 2007, the Dutch Funeral Museum focuses on funeral culture in the Netherlands, honoring the deceased and processions throughout history and in today’s current multicultural climate. The collection includes a variety of funeral coaches, including a nineteenth century ceremonial carriage. Exhibits range from hearses to obituaries, mourning attire and services. They also look at historical customs, from royal processions to rural ceremonies which have remained unchanged for centuries.



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Mummies dug up for a change of wardrobe

Publié par Unknown

If these mummies weren't already dead, they'd be dressed to kill.

That's because they've been dug up as part of a bizarre local ritual in a village in Indonesia that involves giving decomposed corpses a new look.

Family members of the deceased exhuming their ancestors' bodies and change their clothes as a way of remembering them. They then walk the dead around the village, almost like zombies.

The ritual, called Ma'nene, happens every three years to honour the villagers' love for the deceased. It is carried out in the Toraja district of Indonesia's South Sulawesi Province.

Dressing down: Family members carry a coffin containing the preserved body of their relative after putting a new set of clothing on it

Lively tie: This family remember their loved one by digging up his grave every three years

The ritual is held once every few years when family members gather to clean the graves and change the clothes of their deceased relatives to honor their spirits

Glad rags: Locals believe dead family members are still with them, even if they died hundreds of years ago

Coffins containing mummies are seen in a grave house called Patane during the ritual


source : daily mail
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Inside China's mini-Paris: Town built to look just like French capital complete with its own Eiffel Tower and Chapms elysées

Publié par Unknown


With the Eiffel Tower standing proudly above decorative European buildings, this looks like a magnificent view of the famous French capital.

However, not all is at it seems. Incredibly, this Parisian scene is actually in the middle of China.


The Tianducheng development in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province, is filled with grand European buildings and wide walkways.

Ornate fountains and statues also line the streets of the town.






With China's love of all things French, the developers no doubt expected the town to be a huge success.

But things haven't quite worked out as they would have hoped.








Despite being designed to accommodate at least ten thousand people, the town remains sparsely populated.


Local media have now started labelling it as a 'ghost town', with pictures showing the large streets remaining virtually empty.

Images from the town show how China's aspirations and its traditional culture collide.

Surrounded by farmland and wide roads, farmers can be seen working in fields with the mock Eiffel Tower looming over them.


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Awesome Renault Neptune Car

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