¶ … technology has revolutionized society: communication, transportation, commerce, and especially medicine. . Ironically, for centuries and still in Oriental Medicine, healthcare was and is tailored to the individual. Even the Greek Physician Hippocrates wrote that he prescribed sweet elixirs to some and astringents to others depending on their individual condition (Pray, 2008). 21st century medicine, though, is more about an individual person's genetic code, and is made possible by advances in genetic technology and engineering. This is partially due to the Human Genome Project, a massive program completed in 2003 that focused on the identification of the individual genes that make up human DNA with the overall hope that it would initiate genomic medicine -- healthcare delivered based on the individual's medical history and genetic profile (About the Human Genome Project, 2011). Traditionally, medicine diagnoses human illnesses based on quantitative and qualitative signs and symptoms. With the advent of genetic technology, though, predispositions to certain diseases prior to onset may aid patients and physicians in diagnosis and treatment. There are a number of practical, legal and ethical issues that surround genetic testing and, like many new technologies, are quite controversial.
Patient Background: Ms. Brown, a 37-year-old female, reported a mass during a self-breast exam in 2006. A mammogram found suspicious findings, and subsequent biopsy showed atypical ductal hyperplasia. Brown then had a breast lumpectomy and the lump was benign. However, in 1996 she underwent a total abdominal hysterectomy and took hormone replacements until 2006, then the mass was identified. She tried Evista therapy, but stopped based on side effects. Her family history shows that a grandmother and three cousins on the paternal side had some type of "female cancer," and her grandmother was diagnosed with breast cancer while she was in her 40s. Other members of her family had ovarian or other cancers (Jones-Zschaebitz and Lancaster, Chapter 11).
Question 1 - There are numerous advantages one might experience because of personalized medicine. Doctors will have the ability to make more informed medical decisions with a higher probability of success in their diagnosis by using more targeted therapies. Preventive medicine will advance and be the standard -- predicing disease instead of reacting to it. Additionally, there are likely to be huge costs savings to the medical paradigm in that earlier disease intervention allows for earlier, and less aggressive, treatments. Understanding and using a prevention template will also reduct hosptialization costs since most individuals will have a better understanding of their own vulnerabilities, and take steps to prevent them (Personalized Medicine - An Overview, 2011).
There are also negatives to personalized medicine, including, but not limited to a number of legal issues that are now working their way slowly through the Court System. These include liability issues, training, disrimination, and even the fictionalized potential society in which a genetic hierarchy emerged that deemphasized ability, aptly dramatized in the movie Gattaca (Gattaca, 1997). Genetics, in fact, might become the new discriminatory tool, with someone who has but a predisposition to a certain malady being relegated into a sub-societal position. Indeed, there are also ethical issues that will be challenging as personalized medicine develops. How will patient privacy remain protected, will the state require genetic information as part of a person's generalized file, and who might have access and for what reason to a person's genetic map? (Lea, et al., 2011). Indeed, the situation becomes complex when we ask if the patient had a teenage daughter: what information do we share, or do we simply counsel the patient to have regular exams, particularly in the late 20s and early 30s period?
Question 2 - Genetics, in fact, might become the new discriminatory tool, with someone who has but a predisposition to a certain malady being relegated into a sub-societal position. Indeed, there are also ethical issues that will be challenging as personalized medicine develops. How will patient privacy remain protected, will the state require genetic information as part of a person's generalized file, and who might have access and for what reason to a person's genetic map? (Kelly, 2008).
This issue focuses directly on some of the basic principles of medical ethics: to inform, to allow for uncoerced descisions, and to allow the dissemination of needed information to the patient and/or patient's family. The subject of medical ethics remains complex; it is not just about what we can do medically, but what we should do. While the Hippocratic Oath indicates we should "do no harm," we...
Wireless Broadband Technology Overview of Wireless technology Presently it is quite evident to come across functioning of a sort of wireless technology in the form of mobile phone, a Palm pilot, a smart phone etc. With the inception of fast connectivity in the sphere of commerce it is customary and useful to operate from central locations communicating with the remote branches, conducting conferences in remote places, discussing with every body at every
History Of Communication Timeline TIMELINE: HISTORY OF COMMUNICATION (with special reference to the development of the motorcycle) 35,000 BCE. First paleolithing "petroglyphs" and written symbols. This is important in the history of communication because it marks the first time humans left a recorded form of communication. Also, these written symbols became the ultimate source of later alphabets. Wikipedia, "Petroglyph." 12,600 BCE. Cave paintings at Lascaux show early representational art. This is important in the history of communication
Nanotechnology attempted to show the potential of this new technology and included the wide range of fields that are connected to the concept of the nanometer scale. These include machining, imaging, metrology or measurement, micromachines, instrumentation and machine tools, scanning probe microscopy, fabrication of components, nanoelectronics, molecular engineering, among others. (Journal Review: Nanotechnology) Another important step in the development of this technology in both a practical and theoretical sense was
It consists a series of successively smaller platforms which lifted to a height of about 64 feet, and was constructed with a solid core of mud-brick covered by a thick skin of burnt-brick to guard it from the forces of nature (Burney). The Ziggurat's corners are oriented to the compass points, with walls sloping slightly inwards (Molleson and Hodgson) . The Ziggurat of Ur was a component of a temple
Today, even the local gas station and supermarket use computer technology and applications that are much more advanced in their capability than the computer systems used to launch and recover the first generation of spacecraft (Evans, 2004; Kaku, 1997). Modern computer applications perform calculations and allow analyses of very high volumes of information that far exceed the capacity of direct monitoring by human operators (Larsen, 2007; Nocera, 2009). That is
The Role and Impact of Information Systems in Supply Chain and Logistics Management: A Global PerspectiveAbstractThe rapid pace of technological advancements has brought about a paradigm shift in the supply chain and logistics sector. Information systems are becoming indispensable tools that facilitate global transportation, logistical operations, and supply chain management. This paper aims to explore the role of information systems in streamlining supply chain and logistics management, with a particular
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