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Guest Article by Josh Stone
Five Dramatic Developments In The Healthcare Industry
Medical science has made some shocking developments in the past twenty years. For
the first time, our technology is reaching the point where we have to question our
moral right to "play God". It could even turn out that medical science will revolutionize
the 21st century to the same degree that computer science revolutionized the 20th
century. At the same time, present factors of society lay new challenges on the health
care industry. The purpose of this article is to highlight some of the frontiers
being explored in the health care field as well as some new economic and political
developments that affect the industry, and perhaps even forecast what kind of impact
they will have on the health care careers of tomorrow.
Stem cells. Boy, does this
topic raise some debate! Embryonic stem cells are looked to at least as a potential
cure for Parkinson's and Alzheimer's disease, and possibly other neurological disorders
as well. But if we were to routinely start using stem cells as treatment, the moral
implications would be that we are essentially aborting a fetus, taking one life to
save another. Of course, stem cells aren't quite a fetus yet, and that's where the
debate is raging in this gray area between what we know, what we think we know, and
what we have yet to find out.
The scientific research of stem cells is currently hogtied
by the political debate. The science is way ahead of the money, with research labs
having a difficult time getting funding for such a controversial field. One thing
many have pointed out is that no matter what laws the United States passes, some
country, somewhere, will eventually start exploring the uses of stem cells anyway.
That kind of forces our hand, reducing our choice to either leading the way in the
field where we can at least establish oversight to apply standards to the research
that we can all agree are fair, or be left out of the game and have to deal with
developments in other countries that might be even less comfortable for us to deal
with.
Stem cells can help sufferers of neurological disease by producing dopamine,
a neurotransmitter whose deficiency in the brain is a symptom of diseases like Parkinson's.
For that matter, stem cells can be encouraged to grow into fresh replacement brain
cells altogether. That's just scratching the surface of what we can do with stem
cells, and it's that potential power that makes some people nervous.
Iraq and Afghanistan
war veterans. Vietnam veterans returned with their Post-
Soldiers who have been exposed to depleted uranium in Iraq have already
been diagnosed with cancer. Busloads of returning veterans are showing up at hospitals
with psychological problems severe enough to pose a suicide risk. A comprehensive
study done in 2004 estimates the likelihood of soldiers to develop Post-
Add to this a factor that
munitions technology is constantly pushing forward, and Governments don't always
have time to analyze the affects on soldier's health when they are exposed to chemicals
and residue on the battle field. We may have just handed out health care system a
bigger burden that it can handle, by the time the wars are over.
Microbubbles. Take
any oily solution, froth it into a frappe with a high concentration of tiny bubbles,
and inject those into your bloodstream. Now you hit them with ultrasound and a nearly
perfect image of your internal organs will bounce back. Cleared by the FDA in the
late 1990's for use in imaging applications, microbubbles are starting to be an attractive
alternative to traditional methods of internal imaging, being both cheaper and faster
than an MRI.
But wait, there's more. Researchers have discovered another use for microbubbles,
as tiny little carriers for targeted doses of medicine. For instance, drugs can be
delivered directly to a tumor using microbubbles; once at the target location, the
microbubbles can be induced to pop, releasing their medicine payload and reducing
the need to bombard the entire body with radioactive material, for instance. Sometimes
it's the simple things that change our methods the most!
Medical marijuana. Separating
ourselves from the image of hippies toking a bong-
Cannabinoids
have potential to treat Alzheimer's disease, Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, diabetes
mellitus, dystonia, fibromyalgia, gastrointestinal disorders, gliomas, hepatitis
C, hypertension, incontinence, osteoporosis, pruritis, rheumatoid arthritis, sleep
apnea, and Tourette's syndrome. More than the past meek suggestion by the scientific
community that cannabis has some uses, it is rapidly becoming apparent that we may
have been turning our backs on a miracle drug the entire time.
The autism epidemic.
One of the most mysterious neurological disorders of recent times may have finally
gotten a break. Research into the causes of autism has revealed some intriguing clues
-
New research points to a possible culprit: a newly discovered class
of nerve cells in the brain called mirror neurons. These neurons appear to be involved
in mental functions such as empathy and the perception of another individual's intentions.
It has been suggested that a dysfunction of the mirror neuron system could result
in some of the symptoms of autism.
Autism has seen a sharp rise in the past two decades,
but there exists the possibility that previous cases were simply undiagnosed. Moreover,
there may be present misdiagnoses of autism where in fact there are other related
disorders that only share some of the symptoms. Progress in this field is slow and
tedious, but small amounts of progress are now at least providing some hope that
we will eventually be better equipped to treat this disorder. Dare we even hope for
an eventual cure?
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Freelance writer for over eleven years. Nursing Uniforms