I have tried to make my own little mark in this world. My career as a Medical Educator and Clinician in Gastroenterology (see www.gastroindia.net) and my flirtations with Health Promotion, especially amongst school children (see www.hope.org.in) are shown elsewhere.This blog contains my attempts at creative writing, most being write-ups for Health Adda column of HT City of Hindustan Times (also see www.healthaddaindia.blogspot.com) as well as a few others, and some reflections and thoughts that have struck me from time to time on my life journey.Please leave your footprint on this blog with your comment.


Thursday, December 31, 2009

Joint Academic Meeting - Schedule for the year 2010

Sanjay Gandhi Post Graduate Institute of Medical Sciences, Lucknow 





  • Please ensure that you present interesting cases/case series which will interest members of other departments as well.  Presentation of a research work, the findings of which   are of interest only to the concerned department should be avoided as far as possible, unless it has meaningful impact on practice of health care.
  • All departments are requested to send a brief summary of about 400-500 words and the title, 5 days before their scheduled presentation by mail to sgpgitelemedicine@yahoo.com for forwarding to Rohtak Medical College and Berhampur Medical College. Further, departments are requested to paste notices of their title on A4 size paper at the notice board placed at Doctors Cafeteria, OPD, Gastro Department, and G block lifts as well as send an e-mail notice to all concerned at least 4-5 days prior to the presentation.
                                                                                          

Thursday, December 10, 2009

What Internet is Teaching our Brains

While excessive computer use can lead to conditions such as attention deficit disorder, depression anxiety and proneness to violence, recent research has shown that internet is not all that bad after all! The web may in fact be teaching our brains, subtly rewiring the way we respond, think and behave.
The book iBrain – Surviving the Technological Alterations of the Modern Mind, by Dr Gary Small, provides new insight through research undertaken at UCLA, and reveals that an hour of internet use every day may boost brain function. “We learn to react more swiftly to visual stimuli, improve our ability to sift through large amounts of information, and decide what is important and what isn’t”. This training is most evident when we scan our e-mails, quickly deciding and deleting what is spam, while focussing on those that are important.
“If you never use computers, then start”, Professor Small recommends. “As we found, even an hour a day can vastly improve yor infrmation processing skills, even in people aged 55 – 60”.
Internet Search boosts decision-making skills. The rapid spurt of directed concentration for internet research enhances our ability to focus our attention, analyse information and make instant decisions. Web surfers typically spend two seconds or less on any particular website before moving on to the next. In her study, Professor Briggs found that internet users sifted information accurately, despite operating at high speed, stopping only at sites that contained relevant information. She found that within 5 days of regular use, novices showed improved activity in the prefrontal cortex of the brain, that control our ability to make decisions and integrate complex information, indiating that the brain could learn and improve in short time.
General browsing however encourages use of continuous partial attention and multi-tasking, which can impair cognition and can cause irritability.Hopping from one subject to the next on the web without a specific goal, may lead to computer fatigue, as this person might be simultaneously clicking on websites, replying to e-mails or speaking on the phone.
Playing computer games may improve multitasking skills, memory and peripheral vision, but can also lead to antisocial behaviour. Hightened stress levels due to increased levels of adrenaline and stress hormones have been highlighted earlier. But not all games are equal; specialized ones such as Nintendo’s Brain Age and Brain Fitness Program have been specifically designed to enhance memory and cognition, and can stave off age related diseases and Alzheimer’s.
Use of emoticons exercises brain centers linked with emotion and social connection and can be particulary useful to those who use computers for long periods. Use of ‘smileys’ stimulate the part of the brain that is activated by one-to-one emotion contact, and can offset feelings of emotional isolation often seen during excessive computer use.
Benefiting most from computers and technology is however all to do with balance.” If you work all day at a computer, make sure you mix with real people in the evening, rather than using social networking sites or playing computer games”, says Dr Small. And if you never use computers, then start, even if you are a  60 plus.
 As published in HT City ( Hindustan Times) dated 6 december , 2009.