Popular Articles

Experts At Leading Vision Health Care Organization Offer 5 Summer Eye Safety Tips
As summer vacations begin, experts at Lighthouse International urge everyone to take eye safety seriously and prevent damage from the sun that could be permanent. Lighthouse International, based in New York City, is the 104 year old non-profit leader in vision health.

Reminder Program Dramatically Increases Mammography Rates, Kaiser Permanente Study Finds
A reminder program aimed at screening for breast cancer when it is most treatable boosted mammography rates by more than 17 percentage points, according to a new study by Kaiser Permanente"s Center for Health Research in the August issue of the American Journal of Preventive Medicine. The program used electronic health records to identify women who would soon be due for a mammogram and reached out to them via postcards, automated voice messages and personal phone calls.
News of the day
Obama Starts Interviewing Supreme Court Candidates
President Obama on Tuesday started interviewing potential Supreme Court nominees, the Wall Street Journal reports. Senior White House adviser David Axelrod on Tuesday said that the administration is looking for a candidate who will give the powerless and disenfranchised people "a fair shake." Conservatives have said that the nominee will inevitably be a "judicial activist" because Obama has said that he wants to nominate a candidate who can use past experience and empathy for the underrepresented populations to help guide court decisions.Obama has started calling Republican senators in an effort to prevent the "bruising battles" past Supreme Court nominations have encountered during the confirmation process, the Journal reports. Obama called Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) on Tuesday, which Cornyn said was a "nice gesture." Sen. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.) spoke to Obama last week. Coburn said, "I don"t know that it"s going to be contentious," adding, "A prudent man would say, "I"m going to have a couple of Supreme Court nominees. Maybe I want to defuse the thing, the first one, so I can do what I want to do (with) the second one."" Axelrod said that Obama has spoken to 15 senators from both parties (Weisman/Bendavid, Wall Street Journal, 5/20).
Mental Health

Experts Disagree On Whether Healthy People Should Take Brain Boosting Drugs

It is unethical to stop healthy people from taking methylphenidate (Ritalin) to enhance their mental performance, says John Harris, Professor of Bioethics at the University of Manchester, in an article published on bmj.com today. He adds that society "ought to want [enhancement]" and that "it is not rational to be against human enhancement." In total disagreement, Professor Anjan Chatterjee from the University of Pennsylvania argues that there are too many risks in taking Ritalin unless you are actually ill. He notes that the Food and Drug Administration labelled it with a "black box" the most alarming of possible warnings. This is because there is a high potential for abuse, dependence, risk of sudden death and serious adverse effects on the heart, he says. Chatterjee adds that there are cognitive trade-offs by taking Ritalin, for example a loss in creativity. He points out that "being smarter does not mean being wiser" and cites the very smart people who developed ways to distribute financial risk which in turn contributed to the current global economic crisis. Professor Chatterjee is also concerned about the end-goal of taking drugs to enhance cognitive abilities. He not only fears that children at top preparatory schools will end up taking Ritalin in "epidemic proportions" but asks whether pilots, the police and doctors on-call be pressurised into taking these drugs? In conclusion, Chatterjee does not believe it is acceptable to recommend that healthy people take Ritalin to enhance performance until proper safeguards are in place. Professor Harris, on the other hand, believes that these arguments are not persuasive. Harris on the contrary emphasises personal liberty and public safety. As no drug is side effect free, Harris believes Ritalin is "safe enough" given that children and young people with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder are routinely treated for long periods with it. Professor Harris adds that "humans are creatures that result from an enhancement process called evolution and moreover are inveterate self-improvers in every conceivable way." Harris argues that change or progress often carries risk. The development of "synthetic sunshine" (firelights, lamplight and electric light), for example, could have forced people to work through the night. However, the answer was not to outlaw synthetic sunshine but to introduce laws to regulate working hours. "The same is or will be true of chemical cognitive enhancers," he says. British Medical Journal


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