In which direction does causation go here? Does TikTok ruin attention, or do people with poor attention choose TikTok?
In which direction does causation go here? Does TikTok ruin attention, or do people with poor attention choose TikTok?
A few hours later they sent me another email with a link that actually worked! bsky.app/profile/bret...
Hopefully you, like me, will have got a follow-up email with a corrected link that works as it should. bsky.app/profile/bret...
Hopefully you, like me, will have got a follow-up email with a corrected link that works as it should. bsky.app/profile/bret...
Update: Microsoft has sent me another email with a corrected link that indeed leads to the option to move to a Family Classic plan. Problem resolved.
Why? I value OneDrive storage, the option of the web-based Office apps, and being able to collaborate with others on shared documents online. I donβt get those things from LibreOffice (which I agree is good β I prefer Calc to Excel for some tasks). I just donβt want to use or pay for Copilot.
The bad news: when I follow the link to downgrade to Family Classic, I am offered instead only my current expensive Copilot-containing Family plan or a single person Classic plan. Where is the promised Family Classic plan? Microsoft still appears to be making this unreasonably difficult.
The good news: this legal action appears to have precipitated an apology and and offer to convert to βMicrosoft 365 Family Classicβ with a refund, according to this email I received today.
Can GPs improve asthma care and decrease environmental impact, all at the same time? Yes, we can. It was good to talk about this on βThe Good GPβ podcast. thegoodgp.com.au/episode/gree...
Should we aim to bulk bill everyone for GP visits? I said yes, at least in principle. But under current policy settings, I donβt blame GPs for sometimes charging gaps. Good to see a near-consensus in support of the ideal of accessible healthcare. theconversation.com/should-we-ai...
Is this writer available for graduation ceremony speeches? Nailed it.
I donβt think thereβs anything wrong with learning from quality web-based sources. But I think thereβs a lot wrong with not doing the learning in the first place, and hoping youβll fill every gap with a Google search in future years. We need solid foundations as well as ongoing learning.
I suppose it fixes your LUTS while (often) simultaneously causing you new urinary symptoms. Problematic in a different way.
Also, I think if your disease comes back after prostatectomy, you can still have EBRT. I think it doesnβt work the other way around. So by choosing prostatectomy first, people may feel they are saving more options for later. How important this is may depend on life expectancy and patient values.
So why do prostatectomy? Iβm a GP, not a urologist/oncologist, but I think part of the answer may be a perception that prostatectomy is slightly superior (lower mortality estimate in that trial, albeit the difference was not statistically significant and the absolute difference was small).
Also relevant: similar survival rates (as you say) were found in this large RCT: www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.... β arguably more robust than your paper as it was a trial (not observational) and follows people as long as 15 years.
In todayβs episode of βEasily foreseeable effects of policiesβ, we look at what happens when you withhold bulk billing incentives from working age adults during a cost of living crisis. www1.racgp.org.au/newsgp/profe...
Also I wrote this a few years ago for a general readership: theconversation.com/your-asthma-... I would write it a bit differently today though. Since that was written, the role of antiinflammatory relievers (ICS-formoterol) has become a lot more clear.
Hereβs a NewsGP article: www1.racgp.org.au/newsgp/clini...
We also slipped a green inhalers case into this edition of Check (again for GPs): www1.racgp.org.au/getmedia/f90...
At a policy level, this roadmap report is really useful: asthma.org.au/wp-content/u...
And this article in AJGP aimed specifically at a GP audience: www1.racgp.org.au/ajgp/2022/de...
There are a few other resources. Like this recent statement from the National Asthma Council: files.nationalasthma.org.au/resources/NA...
Do you mean prescribing more broadly, rather than inhalers specifically?
Traditional respiratory inhalers (pMDIs) can have surprisingly large climate impacts. How can we limit this impact while ensuring good respiratory health care? After many drafts, we have finally published a position statement: onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/...
I enjoyed this article otherwise!
So among pharmacists following the protocol, I think "nearly 50% misdiagnosed" is probably far too high an estimate.
This (slightly old but relevant) review in JAMA finds: "Specific combinations of symptoms (eg, dysuria and frequency without vaginal discharge or irritation) raise the probability of UTI to more than 90%, effectively ruling in the diagnosis based on history alone." pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/12020306/
The trial protocol would only lead to pharmacist antibiotic prescribing if two or more typical UTI symptoms are present and vaginal symptoms are absent. (Screenshot from: eprints.qut.edu.au/232923/8/UTI...)
Louise writes: "In the North Queensland pharmacy trials, almost 50% of the women who presented were misdiagnosed. We know this because, on average, around 50% of women presenting with UTI symptoms do not, in fact, have a UTI." I don't know if that's quite fair.