Intraspec.ca - Tools for Personal Development
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Society & Culture
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Earth & Climate Change
SITE INDEX
Recent Additions & Updates
Autism & Neurodevelop-
mental Disorders:
Causative Factors, Early Detection, and Interventions
Vitamin D Theory of Autism
Caffeine:
Facts, Amounts, Clinical Studies and Resources
Child Care Cookbook:
Day Care Recipes You
Can Use At Home
Cognitive Mapping:
Definitions, Examples, and Resources
Irrefutable Evidence:
The Importance of Vitamin D in the Prevention of Illness and Death
Linguaphile:
New Words and Phrases
Medicinal Mushrooms:
Treating Illness and Maintaining Health with Fungi
Nordic Walking: Overview
Origin, Health Facts,
Technique, Gear
Pollution in People:
Toxic and Hormone-Disrupting Chemicals in Plastics and Everyday Products
ProPublica:
Investigative Journalism in
the Public Interest
Tools, Gear & Gadgets:
Health & Fitness, Work & Play
What Fish Are Safe To Eat?
Selected Lists and Resources

The Basset Collection, Online
Inside the Body
The Basset Collection Online

The Bassett Collection is a 3-D dissection atlas consisting of 221 View-Master reels of 1,554 painstakingly created, high-resolution color stereo images produced through the collaboration of David L. Basset MD (University of Washington), and William B. Gruber, a master photographer who invented the View-Master system. The "Stereoscopic Atlas of Human Anatomy" was begun in 1948 and completed in 1962, with publications along the way, and was ultimately assembled in 23 printed volumes of eight anatomical sections. Stanford University now owns the collection and is making it available online through a subscription service provided by eHuman, Inc.

Robert Chase MD is Emile Holman Professor of Surgery and Anatomy, Emeritus, at Stanford University School of Medicine, and curator of the Basset Collection. He believes that this is

...one of the world’s most extraordinary collections of 3-D images of human dissections ... such as you’ve never seen before. The collection, and [the] eHuman Dissection system built upon it, represents the most detailed and accurate display of human structure ever developed. The audio-enabled annotations and roll-over identification features used with the eHuman Dissection system provide unique functionality for the medical professional and the merely curious, alike.(1)

The eHuman - Basset Dissection is accessible by subscription: $14.99/mo, $29.99/3mo, and $99.99/y. Several other products are available at a fixed price, including the TMJ Occlusion Atlas v.1.0, the 3-D Tooth Atlas v.6.0 - Hygiene Edition, and the 3-D Skull Atlas v.1.0.

Intraspec.ca

Table of Contents

Alternative Remedies for
Colds and the Flu
Autism & Neurodevelopmental Disorders:
Causative Factors, Early Detection, and Interventions: Notes and References


Vitamin D Theory of Autism
Vitamin D Council Executive Director John Cannell MD presents a compelling argument that vitamin D deficiency and autism are iatrogenic diseases caused by modern sun-avoidance.
Caffeine
Facts, Amounts, Clinical Studies and Resources
Consumer Health Resources -
Search Tools, Medical Journals & Selected Health Information Sites
Disease Mongering:
Widening the Boundaries of Treatable Disease
Find A Doctor or Naturopath in Canada
Illness should never be considered 'normal at that age'
Reprint of Age shall not weary you, an article by Thijs Westerbeek.
Irrefutable Evidence:
The Importance of Vitamin D in the Prevention of Illness and Death

Reprint of Millions of Needless Deaths, an article by William Faloon.
Medicinal Mushrooms
Maintaining Health and Treating Illness
with Fungi
Medical Marijuana
Natural Remedies
Herbal, Homeopathic, Biochemic
Nordic Walking - Overview
Origin, Health Facts, Technique and Gear
Ottawa Walk-In Clinics
Ottawa Flu Shot Clinics
Includes swine flu resources.
Pollution in People:
Toxic and Hormone-Disrupting Chemicals in Plastics and Everyday Products
Swanson Health Products —
Where quality still matters.
Vitamins, minerals, nutritional health products, herbal and homeopathic supplements at discount prices.
Thoracic Outlet Syndrome - Overview
Tools, Gear & Gadgets:
Health & Fitness, Work & Play

Latest Health News and Medical News
posted throughout the day, every day.
Medical News Today

Stem Cell Therapeutics Corp. ("SCT" or the "Company") (TSX VENTURE:SSS) wishes to announce the acceptance and publication of the paper entitled "The Beta-hCG + Erythropoietin in Acute Stroke ( BETAS) Study" by the journal "Stroke", on March 8, 2010. This paper was authored by Dr. Steven C. Cramer, from the University of California, Irvine, Dr. David Brown at Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian, New Port Beach, Dr. Michael D. Hill of Foothills Hospital at the University of Calgary, and colleagues. Dr...


Medtronic, Inc. (NYSE: MDT) announced the U.S. launch of the VERTEX SELECT® Reconstruction System. When a patient has a spinal condition that requires fusion or a procedure that must be performed from the back of the spine, also known as a posterior approach, the VERTEX SELECT® Reconstruction System contains implants and an instrument set for performing this surgical procedure. Conditions of the spine, such as degenerative disc disease, tumor, or trauma, can lead to instability and pain for patients...


Congressman Patrick J. Kennedy (D-RI) was honored last night by the American Psychological Association for his advocacy work and legislative accomplishments on mental health issues. The APA presented Kennedy with the 2010 Outstanding Leadership Award, given annually to a member of Congress who has prominently championed the goals of professional psychology. "Congressman Kennedy has been a tireless crusader of mental health rights," says Katherine C. Nordal, PhD, APA executive director for professional practice...


A study of over 80,000 American live kidney donors found they were likely to live just as long as people who have two healthy kidneys and that the procedure carries very little medical risk. You can read about the landmark study by lead author and transplant surgeon Dr Dorry L Segev, from the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, and colleagues, online in the 10 March issue of JAMA, Journal of the American Medical Association...


Dental patient charges in Wales have been frozen for the fourth year running to help maintain wider access to NHS dentistry, Health Minister Edwina Hart announced today [Thursday, 11 March]...


The InterAcademy Council (IAC), a multinational organization of the world's science academies, has been requested to conduct an independent review of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) processes and procedures. The study comes at the invitation of the United Nations secretary-general and the chair of the IPCC, and will help guide the processes and procedures of the IPCC's fifth report and future assessments of climate science...


What Families living with muscle disease in the East of England are joining forces with clinicians and MPs at an inaugural conference for the region, organised by the Muscular Dystrophy Campaign. The conference will be an opportunity for families to learn more about fighting for better muscle disease services in their region and to find out how local campaigning can make a real difference. There will be talks from leading clinicians and local MPs about recent care developments and how best to make your voice heard on healthcare issues...


Congressional Deals: Watching The Sausage Making Politico Legislators need pork to make things happen, especially in an age when chronic obstruction has so weakened the legislative process that policy breakthroughs are almost impossible. This does not excuse all kinds of deal making, nor should we ignore that deals sometimes go too far (Julian E. Zelizer, 3/10). Health Care Reform's Sickeningly Sweet Deals The Washington Post Skipping through the Candy Land of the health-care bill, one is tempted to hum a few bars of "Let Me Call You Sweetheart." What a deal. For dealmakers, that is...


Drug maker GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) "plans to bolster earnings by selling to more people in middle-income countries after cutting prices in the world's poorest nations," Bloomberg/BusinessWeek reports. "Our strategy is to grow our business in middle-income countries by increasing the volume of products we sell," GSK Chief Executive Andrew Witty said by e-mail, according to the news service...


Nearly 50% Of Food Aid Sent To Somalia Never Makes It To People In Need "As much as half the food aid sent to Somalia is diverted from needy people to a web of corrupt contractors, radical Islamist militants and local United Nations staff members, according to a new Security Council report," the New York Times reports. "The report, which has not yet been made public ...


In one of the first such studies involving human patients with schizophrenia, researchers at UC Davis have provided evidence that deficits in a brain chemical may be responsible for some of the debilitating cognitive deficits - poor attention, memory and problem-solving abilities - that accompany the delusions and hallucinations that are the hallmarks of the disorder. The study, published online in the Journal of Neuroscience, suggests an important avenue of inquiry for improving cognitive function in the more than 2 million Americans who suffer from schizophrenia, according to Jong H...


If you can imagine identical twin sisters at rest, their breath drawing them subtly together and apart, who somehow latch onto ropes that pull them to opposite sides of the bed - you can imagine what happens to a chromosome in the dividing cell. Understanding the forces that drive chromosome segregation - a crucial aspect of human development and some diseases, including cancer - is the goal of an international group of researchers who collaborate each summer at the MBL...


A study of seismic activity near Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport by researchers from Southern Methodist University and the University of Texas at Austin reveals that the operation of a saltwater injection disposal well in the area was a "plausible cause" for the series of small earthquakes that occurred in the area between Oct. 30, 2008, and May 16, 2009. The incidents under study occurred in an area of North Texas where the vast Barnett Shale geological formation traps natural gas deposits in subsurface rock...


In the "three years since the Supreme Court's conservative majority abruptly departed from precedent to uphold a federal ban on a particular method of abortion, ... foes of reproductive freedom are pressing new attacks on women's rights and health," a New York Times editorial states. Utah Gov. Gary Herbert (R) "has signed a bill (HB 462) that would criminalize certain behavior by women that results in miscarriage," the editorial notes. It adds, "The measure exempts lawful abortions, and particularly worrisome language about 'reckless' acts has been removed...


The West Virginia House Health and Human Resources Committee on Monday voted 16-9 to approve a bill (HB 4517) that would require physicians to give women the opportunity to view an ultrasound image at least one hour before performing an abortion, the Charleston Gazette reports. According to the Gazette, the rule would only apply to cases where ultrasound technology already is being used. The Senate passed the bill last week (Knezevich, Charleston Gazette, 3/8). The bill now proceeds to the House Judiciary Committee (AP/Charleston Gazette, 3/8)...


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