Dr. Sydney Burwell, Dean of Harvard Medical School 1956

My students are dismayed when I say to them "Half of what you are taught as medical students will in 10 years have been shown to be wrong.
And the trouble is, none of your teachers know which half."



Friday, February 7, 2014

Top Story

For stroke, pre-diabetes and coronary heart disease, physical activity seems to be as good as popping a pill
The evidence "suggests that exercise and many drug interventions are often potentially similar" in terms of reducing mortality during rehabilitation after stroke, prevention of diabetes and secondary prevention of coronary heart disease, according to the study, published in October in the British journal BMJ. (Secondary prevention refers to early detection of a disease and treatments that prevent it from getting worse.)

Only in one specific instance—heart failure—was one type of prescription drugs clearly more beneficial than exercise, the study found. Fewer deaths occurred in patients who took diuretics rather than exercising or taking other medications. MedicalXpress

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