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1.
Mayo Clin Proc Innov Qual Outcomes ; 3(2): 215-220, 2019 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31193896

ABSTRACT

In this article, the authors offer a new perspective on how the administration of Compound E (ie, cortisone) to a volunteer Mayo Clinic patient with rheumatoid arthritis and the patient's subsequent miraculous improvement led not only to a major, successful clinical trial but also a Nobel Prize. The early and late side effects as an undesirable outcome of treatment of corticosteroids would soon follow. Corticosteroid side effects became known in popular culture, first through an indepth article in The New Yorker by medical journalist Berton Roueché, and later through a major fiction film, Bigger than Life, directed by Nicholas Ray. The film used cortisone as a plot device to "unmask" what the filmmaker perceived to be the lie of middle class prosperity in America of the 1950s. Bigger than Life is also a cinematic argument against the use of cortisone. Dr. Philip Hench was also connected to Bigger than Life, and the Ray-Hench connection is further explored based on newly found material. The discovery of "wonder drug" cortisone and its potential side effects-all carefully described in the Roueché article but exaggerated in Nicholas Ray's film in the 1950s-show how medicine can be portrayed in popular culture.

2.
J Am Coll Radiol ; 15(1 Pt B): 162-166, 2018 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29128500

ABSTRACT

Hippocrates' admonition and the medical community's aversion to risk have caused many physicians and institutions to resist participation in modern social media sites such as Facebook (Facebook, Inc, Menlo Park, California, USA), Twitter (Twitter Inc, San Francisco, California, USA), and YouTube (San Mateo, California, USA). However, because Mayo Clinic's founders were champions of analog social networking, it was among the earliest hospitals worldwide to create official accounts on these digital platforms. A proper understanding of the traditional mechanisms of knowledge diffusion in medicine and of the nature of social media sites should help professionals see and embrace the opportunities for positive engagement in social media.


Subject(s)
Hospitals/history , Information Dissemination/history , Marketing of Health Services/history , Social Media/history , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Minnesota , Social Networking/history
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