Digital Scryer

Bringing News of Everything Interesting From Outside the Box

Archive for the ‘Minipost 1’ Category

This caught my eye from scienceblog.com, mainly because there’s a history of stroke and aneurysms in my family, and this is what killed Einstein. My comments are the bold italics.

Preventive operations are being used more and more often to treat abdominal aortic aneurysms. Even though the operation is now being offered to ever older and sicker patients, the long-term survival of those who have had the operation has improved over the last two decades. This is shown in a major Swedish study in which researchers from Uppsala University examined 12,000 patients. The findings are published in Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association.

12,000 people is usually a pretty good amount of people to study, but 12,000 PATIENTS, this lends massive weight to the study.

Each year between 700 and 1,000 Swedes die as a result of rupture of abdominal aortic aneurysms. The number of preventive operations is on the rise throughout the Western world, for one thing because the population is growing older and also because with new methods it is possible today to treat older and sicker patients. How patients’ long-term survival following the operation has been affected by the fact that older and sicker patients are being operated on has been unclear until now. Long-term survival is not only of great importance to the patient, but also to society, since the operation is a major and costly intervention.

I’d be interested to find out if the numbers of people who die of AAA is the same in other modernized parts of the world per capita.

The research team has previously reported that fewer and fewer patients are dying in connection with the operation. In the new study, which is based on the Swedish vascular registry (Swedvasc), the researchers have studied the long-term survival of more than 12,000 patients who underwent operations for abdominal aortic aneurysm in Sweden between 1987 and 2005.

The study shows that on average patients live nine years after the operation, which is only marginally shorter than the normal longevity of Swedes of the same age and sex. Men and patients over the age of 80 had better so-called relative survival than women and patients under 80. The fact that the women did not live as long as the men following the operation is believed be due to the circumstance that women with aortic aneurysm often also have more pronounced atherosclerosis.

So let that be a less to women, take better preventative steps when dealing with artery health.

“Patients who undergo operations for abdominal aortic aneurysm can look forward to nearly normal longevity,” says Kevin Mani, a researcher at the Division of Vascular Surgery at Uppsala University and physician at Uppsala University Hospital. He is the lead author of the study.

Almost normal longevity on the patients who needed the treatment; coming up with a way of reinforcing the arterial systems of healthy people would increase everyone’s lifespan. It would also prevent this disease.

“Patients are being treated more and more effectively after the operation, which has improved both the short- and long-term results. This is also good news in terms of the cost of health care: the longer patients survive after the intervention, the more cost-effective the operations are,” says Kevin Mani.

It’s impressive that the technology has come so far.



Popularity: 1% [?]

Technorati Tags: , , , , , ,

5 Steps To Building A Successful Business

Posted by Brent On May - 29 - 2009

Having your own business, from my point of view, is very important. Working to make something out of (and for) yourself as opposed to making someone else wealthy. There are a few fundamental steps to take when building your own business, which I will chronicle here with some detail.

1. Have An Idea

First off you need an idea, whether this is a truly unique idea or just a unique take on an existing idea is fine. Your business ideas can range from the fantastic to the mundane, and be anything from a service to a reusable or consumable product (I’d recommend service or consumable product if you want to have recurring income). Ideas don’t fall from trees; some of you may be very creative and some of you might not be. Either is okay.

For those of you who are a bit creatively stunted right now, I’ve found this nifty idea generator online.

Idea Generator

You can use it by pressing the arrows to turn the dials, or by clicking on the intertwined arrows to generate a random idea. It does generate some pretty cool ideas by themselves, or aspect of ideas that can really get your creative juices flowing. Thanks to our friends at The Directors Bureau Special Projects for providing this amazing widget free of charge. It almost makes me want to compulsively try every idea it generates.

2. Market Research

This is the next and probably most important step you can do. It’ll allow you to decide if an idea is worth investing your time and (possibly someone else’s) money on. There are several ways to go about doing this. You can go the fast and easy route and do it online, or you can hire somebody to do it for you.

Market SamuraiIf you go about it online, you can use an awesome program like Market Samurai which comes with a 12 day free trial that is SO worth it, or you can join the 30 Day Challenge to learn all about marketing and building an online business and Market Samurai will come with a FORTY DAY free trial. Cool stuff!

You can also use a program called Micro Niche Finder to do similar research. This ingenious program has a lot of overlapping functionality with Market Samurai, but like its Samurai cousin it has independent features too. It’s also much more user friendly for the newbies out there.

Both programs are excellent tools that truly make market research super fast and super easy. They also both have AMAZING free tutorial videos to not only teach you how to use the programs, but how to use them to make some quick, easy money by generating affiliate income streams.

Next you can do manual online market research. The following an amazing Youtube video from the 30 Day Challenge training about doing manual market research online.

There are more videos that expand on these principles both manually and using software, so I’d recommend just joining the 30 Day Challenge to see what they have to offer, it’s free and amazing.

Finally you can go the government route, like I can with Small Business BC which has free market research tools or a paid service where they do it for you. You can also go through an online market research firm like Tab House, or Google it.

3. Product Development

If your market research proves that your idea is something workable, the next step is to make your product viable by developing it. If you have the personal know how to build your product, go for it. If you don’t, you can hire a service to do it for you.

Elance.com is perfect for this. You can find TONS of freelancers from every walk of life. Programmers, engineers, etc. and all of them looking for work. You can also post a job you want done, and professionals will bid on it for the right to work for you. This is usually much cheaper than finding a lab to do development for you. Although you can do that too, using Google. One place I found is called Sunrise Labs.

4. Mass Production

Once you’ve had your product developed to the point where it can be made as small, cheap, and safe as possible, it’s time to go into mass production. Many times when you outsource development to a lab, you’ll find that they may even have the facilities to mass produce your item. Either that or you can take the prototype (or chemical formula etc.) they’ve made for you to a company that exists specifically to mass produce the type of product you’ve got.

Wikipedia has a great list of manufacturing companies from all over the US. This will require some additional research on your part, but Google can also help you if you search for the topic relevant to your item and manufacturers e.g. “Ski pole manufacturers”. You can then contact the companies you find and ask them if they’d be interested in either licensing your product (earning you a percentage of every one of your items that they sell) or producing it for you in bulk for a fee up front.

5. Marketing

The final step to this wondrous process is marketing. This is the process of advertising your product and getting it out there for people to buy. You can do this yourself in a limited fashion i.e. taking internet marketing courses, learning how to use things like Search Engine Optimization (S.E.O.), Google Adwords etc. or you can hire a marketing firm or advertising agency which can get your product out there and advertised online as well as in the real world.

If you’ve done proper market research, made a good product, and done good marketing that adapts in real time to your market’s changes, you should start raking in the dough.

This is all a pretty vast simplification of the process, and will require you do a lot of your own research, but I hope it’s opened your eyes to how you can build yourself a successful business.

Popularity: 3% [?]

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Home Wind Power

Posted by Brent On May - 11 - 2009

The premiering post of the Home Wind Power blog at DigitalScryer.

Popularity: 1% [?]

Technorati Tags: , ,