Mapping Travel Medicine
Title:
Mapping Travel Medicine
Description:
Google Tech Talks February, 8 2008 ABSTRACT Emporiatrics or Travel Medicine is a discipline within medicine that prepares a traveler using vaccines, medicines and knowledge to avoid disease when visiting a foreign destination. I will discuss the current mapping of interventions offered to patients planning trips and illustrate with examples how the constraints of patient needs and the risks at a specific destination overlap to arrive at a list of recommendations that are offered a traveler before departure. Depending on crowd size I can run through personal case examples for those who are planning an exotic trip. I hope to also highlight limitations of the practice of emporiatrics and suggest where Google can potentially offer a useful "expert system" that might be modulated by risk, price points and insurance coverage using disease maps from publicly available surveillance data and patient records, using the Kaiser Epic Data system. Speaker: D. Scott Smith. Scott grew up in Boulder Colorado and attended medical school at the University of Colorado. He went to public health school at Harvard University where an interest in Tropical Public Health was further developed, leading to a year long adventure on a Fulbright scholarship in Cali, Colombia, seeking improved diagnostic technologies to understand the epidemiology of leishmaniasis, and onchocerciasis (River Blindness). He completed residency then a Fellowship at Stanford University in Medicine then Infectious Disease & Geographic Medicine. Scott practices at Kaiser in Redwood City, California where he heads the HIV/AIDS clinic and oversees the travel medicine services locally but also is developing regionalization of the Travel Medicine Services for Kaiser Northern California. He co-chairs the biennial National Conference on Preparing International Travelers. He teaches at Stanford Medical School in the Microbiology and Immunology Division and directs a course for undergraduates in Human Biology entitled "Parasites & Pestilence: Public Health Challenges". He was recently presented the Bloomfield award in recognition of excellence in the teaching of clinical medicine at Stanford School of Medicine. Acknowledging Candid's epiphany (after tumultuous world travel) that staying in one's own backyard is a pathway to happiness, in his spare time he gardens and keeps chickens and bees. As one's own content is not a final destination, he recently traveled with family to Uganda and South Africa to speak and visit an AIDS study site and to see family later this year. http://www.permanente.net/homepage/doctor/scottsmith/ http://www.stanford.edu/class/humbio103/
Author:
googletechtalks
Tags:
google, techtalks, techtalk, engedu, talk, talks, googletechtalks, education,
Mapping Travel Medicine
Description:
Google Tech Talks February, 8 2008 ABSTRACT Emporiatrics or Travel Medicine is a discipline within medicine that prepares a traveler using vaccines, medicines and knowledge to avoid disease when visiting a foreign destination. I will discuss the current mapping of interventions offered to patients planning trips and illustrate with examples how the constraints of patient needs and the risks at a specific destination overlap to arrive at a list of recommendations that are offered a traveler before departure. Depending on crowd size I can run through personal case examples for those who are planning an exotic trip. I hope to also highlight limitations of the practice of emporiatrics and suggest where Google can potentially offer a useful "expert system" that might be modulated by risk, price points and insurance coverage using disease maps from publicly available surveillance data and patient records, using the Kaiser Epic Data system. Speaker: D. Scott Smith. Scott grew up in Boulder Colorado and attended medical school at the University of Colorado. He went to public health school at Harvard University where an interest in Tropical Public Health was further developed, leading to a year long adventure on a Fulbright scholarship in Cali, Colombia, seeking improved diagnostic technologies to understand the epidemiology of leishmaniasis, and onchocerciasis (River Blindness). He completed residency then a Fellowship at Stanford University in Medicine then Infectious Disease & Geographic Medicine. Scott practices at Kaiser in Redwood City, California where he heads the HIV/AIDS clinic and oversees the travel medicine services locally but also is developing regionalization of the Travel Medicine Services for Kaiser Northern California. He co-chairs the biennial National Conference on Preparing International Travelers. He teaches at Stanford Medical School in the Microbiology and Immunology Division and directs a course for undergraduates in Human Biology entitled "Parasites & Pestilence: Public Health Challenges". He was recently presented the Bloomfield award in recognition of excellence in the teaching of clinical medicine at Stanford School of Medicine. Acknowledging Candid's epiphany (after tumultuous world travel) that staying in one's own backyard is a pathway to happiness, in his spare time he gardens and keeps chickens and bees. As one's own content is not a final destination, he recently traveled with family to Uganda and South Africa to speak and visit an AIDS study site and to see family later this year. http://www.permanente.net/homepage/doctor/scottsmith/ http://www.stanford.edu/class/humbio103/
Author:
googletechtalks
Tags:
google, techtalks, techtalk, engedu, talk, talks, googletechtalks, education,
Popular searches: Cuba, Scuba Diving, Skydiving, Dubai, Niagara Falls, Rainforest, Surfing, Snowboarding, Sandboarding, Pyramids, Everest, Stonehenge, Bear Grylls
Related Videos:
![]() | Leishmaniasis Is A Disease youtubebuzzmarketing.com This is youtube Buzz Marketing and how it's done. Leishmaniasis Is A Disease |
![]() | Amazone : at the end of the trail, leishmaniasis a medical team visits a Matsiguengas community in the peruvian amazone for a prevention campaign against leishmaniasis. The indian assembly take part to the educative session |
![]() | Travel Medicine: Have Drugs Will travel Dr. Robert Derlet of the UC Davis School of Medicine covers how to stay healthy while traveling. Get recommendations for medical travel bags and be prepared for medical emergencies. Series: "UC Grand Rounds Series" [2/2008] [Health and Medicine] [Professional Medical Education] [Show ID: 13993] |
![]() | Big Animals - How photography of big marine and land animals can improve our... Google Tech Talks May, 8 2008 ABSTRACT Big animals - if we learn to love them and understand their survival - we will do everything to protect them. Professional marine and wildlife photographer Amos Nachoum will show his photos of large animals from around the world, talk about the process of taking these photos, show the equipment he uses, and describe why we should care about and protect these animals. Check out a preview of some of his stunning wildlife photos: www.corp.google.com This ... |
![]() | GoLite helps sponsor Medicines Global youth expedition Four Medicines Global Outdoor Youth Ambassadors from gang ridden inner city Los Angeles trekked through Nepal in 2007 delivering medicine and aid to people in need. And their lives were changed... Want to help this great organization continue their work? Visit their website at www.medicinesglobal.org or email jbmedicinesglobal@ca.rr.com |
![]() | River blindness slideshow - 37 Million and Counting This is a slideshow of still images from our documentary "37 Million and Counting". African river blindness (onchocerciasis) is a disease caused by a parasite worm that plagues 37 million people worldwide. It is the second leading cause of infectious blindness and the majority of cases are found in Africa. More information can be found at www.37millionandcounting.com |
![]() | Onchocerciasis Science Project for Zoology, 2009 |
![]() | Trailer 1 - 37 Million and Counting - River Blindness This is a trailer for our documentary "37 Million and Counting". African river blindness (onchocerciasis) is a disease caused by a parasite worm that plagues 37 million people worldwide. It is the second leading cause of infectious blindness and the majority of cases are found in Africa. More information can be found at www.37millionandcounting.com |
![]() | The Murder Human parasite: Leishmania is a genus of trypanosome protozoa, and is the parasite responsible for the disease leishmaniasis. It is spread through sandflies of the genus Phlebotomus in the Old World, and of the genus Lutzomyia in the New World. Their primary hosts are vertebrates; Leishmania commonly infects hyraxes, canids, rodents, and humans. Leishmania currently affects 12 million people in 88 countries. en.wikipedia.org |
![]() | Disaster Epidemiology: Rapid Needs Assessments Epidemiologists play an important role in assessing the health effects of natural and man-made disasters and in identifying the factors that contribute to these effects. Join Wayne Enanoria Ph.D., from UC Berkeley's Center for Infectious Disease Preparedness, in this three-part series as he discusses key topics in disaster epidemiology. Rapid needs assessments is discussed in this first program. The California Office of Binational Border Health (COBBH) has sponsored these programs which are ... |
Popular searches: Cuba, Scuba Diving, Skydiving, Dubai, Niagara Falls, Rainforest, Surfing, Snowboarding, Sandboarding, Pyramids, Everest, Stonehenge, Bear Grylls

العربية
中国
Français
Deutsch
Ελληνική
हिन्दी
Italiano
日本語
Português
Русский
Español








