Wesley J. Smith is a senior fellow at the Discovery Institute’s Center on Human Exceptionalism, and consults for the Patients Rights Council.
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Wesley J. Smith
Medical War Against the Elderly: British Medical Journal Reveals Undertreatment of Elderly Stroke Patients
From First ThoughtsThe UK’s medical war against the elderly (especially the frail) seems undeniable. First, there was age-based rationing at the NHS. Then, a nurse whistle blower lost her nursing license for publicly telling the truth about elder neglect at a hospital. Now, the British Medical Journal reveals . . . . Continue Reading »
War Against Elderly Patients in the UK—Nurse Struck From Rolls for Exposing Abuse
From First ThoughtsA nurse in the UK reveals terrible abuse and neglect of elderly patients at a hospital in the UK. You’d think the powers that be would give her a medal. Nope. As I reported here yesterday, Margaret Haywood secretly filmed and proved how badly patients were being treated. Her reward? . . . . Continue Reading »
A new report shows that predicting for health outcomes and creating genetic fixes for common diseases is very difficult. From the story:The era of personal genomic medicine may have to wait. The genetic analysis of common disease is turning out to be a lot more complex than expected.Since the human . . . . Continue Reading »
I put much time and effort into reporting stories here at SHS about stem cell research, human cloning, and other matters of biotechnology. But because SHS covers broad areas of concern and interest—and to keep our ponderings varied and lively—of necessity I may miss important stories in . . . . Continue Reading »
NHS Meltdown: Blow the Whistle on Neglect of Elderly Patients—and You Take the Fall
From First ThoughtsOur world is so upside-down. A nurse secretly filmed terrible neglect of elderly UK hospital patients—and she is sanctioned for misconduct! From the story: An undercover nurse who carried out secret filming to reveal the neglect of elderly patients on a hospital ward was found guilty of . . . . Continue Reading »
Yesterday, I wrote about a diabetes human trial using adult stem cells in which some of the patients were able to go off insulin. I predicted at the time that it wouldn’t make big time headlines—as would happen if the exact same achievement happened with human patients using embryonic . . . . Continue Reading »
People who have badly damaged tendons may soon find relief from their own adult stem cells. From the story:A stem-cell repair technique that has already been used to fix hundreds of injured race horses is to be tested for the first time in people with damaged Achilles tendons.Privately owned British . . . . Continue Reading »
As I often say, the culture of death brooks no dissent. Now, none other than the controversial academic Stanley Fish claims that doctors and nurses who don’t wish to take human life as part of their medical work should just get over it. From his New York Times blog (of course): . . . . Continue Reading »
Stowers Institute Only Has Itself to Blame as MO House Restricts State Funding of Life Sciences
From First ThoughtsWhen the Stowers Institute Crowd financed and passed Amendment 2, it not only created a constitutional right to do human cloning research in Missouri, but as I pointed out during the campaign, it added a superfluous provision stating that if one kind of stem cell research received state support, . . . . Continue Reading »
Al Gore is set to head a venture capital foray into the very promising field of induced pluripotent stem cell research. From the story:Former vice president Al Gore is entering the stem cell arena with an announcement today of a $20 million biotech venture in the hot area of “induced . . . . Continue Reading »
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