CHECKLIST
Colin Ramsey: “Dude! To whom do we write?! Whom do we call!? We MUST not allow this research to be
scuttled!”
F Happily, sanity seems to have prevailed .
. .
David Plumb: “See
this
February 15 press release – good news.”
The Office for Human Research
Protections (OHRP) -- part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services --
has concluded that Michigan hospitals can continue implementing a
checklist to reduce the rate of catheter-related infections in intensive
care unit settings (ICUs) without falling under regulations governing human subjects research.
F Good news indeed.
Peter Kaczowka: “Re
David Walker’s comment
yesterday on the similarities between us and Rome: All
Americans should read Wealth
and Democracy by Kevin Phillips, then the rest of his books. From this review:
The tilting of the US
economy from production to finance as a source of wealth will spell the end of
our economic dominance
-- just as it spelled the end of the Spanish (1530-1588), Dutch (1600-1702),
and British (1815-1914) economic dominance.
Phillips supports his thesis that in the modern U.S.,
laissez-faire "is a pretense. Government power and preferment have been
used by the rich, not shunned. As wealth concentration grows, especially near
the crest of a drawn-out boom, so has upper-bracket control of politics and its
ability to shape its own preferment."
Wealth and Democracy is
not a Socialist critique of Capitalism, but rather a Capitalist critique of
excess. Phillips
seems more in love with democracy than he is in awe of the invisible hand of
the marketplace.
F Yes!
. . . and yet never count America
out. Innovation and technology (married
to the responsible tax policy and regulation that a Democratic Administration
and Congress might give us) could still ride to the rescue. To wit:
DO NOT LOOK STRAIGHT AT IT
Not even for a fermtosecond.
James Musters: “This
will not make you smarter, or help you live a greener life, at least not for
now. But WOW.”
F Wow, indeed:
If you could hold a
giant magnifying glass in space and focus all the sunlight shining toward Earth
onto one grain of sand, that concentrated ray would approach the intensity of a
new laser beam made in a University
of Michigan laboratory.
. . . The pulsed laser beam lasts just 30 femtoseconds.
A femtosecond is a millionth of a billionth of a
second. . . .
Such intense beams could help scientists develop better proton and
electron beams for radiation treatment of cancer, among other applications.
The record-setting beam measures 20 billion trillion watts per
square centimeter. It contains 300 terawatts of power. That's 300 times the
capacity of the entire U.S.
electricity grid. The laser beam's power is concentrated to a 1.3-micron speck
about 100th the diameter of a human hair. . .