Engineer Tried to Save His Sister and Invented a Breakthrough Medical Device
Posted on September 9, 2009 Comments (4)
Here is another remarkable example of the great benefit engineers provide society.
How a software engineer tried to save his sister and invented a breakthrough medical device
There are billions of dollars spent every year on clinical studies. I was surprised to discover that there were sometimes clinical studies of treatments for which there were no clinical applications. The trials would show successful results but no clinical applications.
I found a 1987 Italian funded set of clinical studies that showed successful treatment of tumors by the application of chemotherapy directly into the tumors. But I could find nothing since then.
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It took us two years to do the engineering. And it has taken the FDA seven years and two months to approve the product for sale. We were able to shorten the FDA process a little by saying that it was similar to other devices that had already been approved.
Great stuff.
Related: Cardiac Cath Lab: Innovation on Site – Surgeon-engineer advances high-tech healing – Home Engineering: Dialysis machine – StoryCorps: Passion for Mechanical Engineering – Engineers Should Follow Their Hearts
Scientific Illiteracy Leaves Many at Risk in Making Health Care Judgements
Posted on September 8, 2009 Comments (5)
Scientific literacy is important for many reasons and that importance has increased greatly over the last century. Medical research is often difficult to interpret. Often various studies seem to contradict each other. Often the conclusions that are drawn are far too broad (especially as the research conclusions are passed on and people hear of them overly simplified ways).
Many health care options are not obviously all good, or all bad, but instead a mix of benefits and risks, both of which include interactions with the individuals makeup. So we often see contradictory (and seemingly contradictory) advice. Without a level of scientific literacy it is very difficult for people to know how to react to medical advice.
We have numerous posts on the scientific inquiry process showing that acquiring scientific knowledge is complex and can be quite confusing in many instances. While understanding things are often less clear cut than they are presented it is still true that most often strategies for healthy living have far better practices that will provide far better results than alternatives.
The scientific illiteracy that has some think because their are risks no matter what is done that means there is no evidence some alternatives are far superior is very dangerous. As you can see in action now with those that risk their and others lives and health by doing things like not vaccinating their children, or driving when drunk, or driving when talking on a cell phone.
Without a scientifically literate society even completely obvious measures like not using antibiotics on viral infections are ignored.
Related: Long Term ADHD Drug Benefits Questioned – How Prozac Sent Science Inquiry Off Track – Lifestyle Drugs and Risk – Correlation is Not Causation: “Fat is Catching” Theory Exposed
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Appropriate Technology: Solar Water in Poor Cairo Neighborhoods
Posted on September 7, 2009 Comments (8)
Cairo Slums Get Energy Makeover
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Solar CITIES’ hot water systems are constructed from recycled materials and are uniquely tailored to the parts of a city where water and electricity availability are often sporadic. “The problem with professional solar hot water systems is that they’re made for cities with continuous water,” Culhane said. By contrast, Solar CITIES’s water heaters use a city’s water when it’s available but draw from a backup storage tank when it’s not.
The setup consists of an insulated rectangular box covered in clear glass or plastic on one side. Inside the box are copper tubes wrapped in sheets of aluminum, which are painted black. Sunlight striking the darkened aluminum is converted to heat, which is then used to warm water flowing through the pipes. The glass sheet on top of the box prevents the heat from being carried away by wind.
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Solar CITIES also installs biogas reactors, which are based on designs Culhane saw while working in India. The reactors use microbes harvested from animal guts to break down food wastes into flammable gas that can be used for cooking and heating. If necessary, the reactors can draw hot water from the solar water heaters to maintain the warm temperatures the bacteria need to survive.
By attaching a simple plastic tube to the reactors, gas can be piped down several stories for residents to use. “In 24 hours, you’ve got 2 hours of cooking gas from yesterday’s cooking garbage,” Culhane said. The biogas reactors provide a more reliable supply of cooking gas than most residents currently have.
Awesome, I love to see people using engineering to make life better for those that can truly use help.
Related: Engineering Appropriate Technology Solutions – Water Pump Merry-go-Round – Reducing Poverty – 15 Photovoltaics Solar Power Innovations – Curious Cat Egypt Travelogue
Tags: Africa,appropriate technology,Energy,engineering webcasts,green,Products,solar energy,water
Researchers Work to Protect Bats Against Deadly Disease
Posted on September 6, 2009 Comments (1)
Researchers work to protect Wisconsin bats against deadly disease
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One female little brown bat – with a body less than the length of your thumb – can eat its body weight in insects in one evening, Redell said. Such is the insect-hunting prowess of the bats that they are thought to save farmers billions of dollars in crop losses, according to Sheryl L. Ducummon, with Bat Conservation International.
In a recent scientific article on the ecological and economic importance of bats, Ducummon reported that, in one summer, the 150 bats in an average colony of big brown bats can conservatively eat 38,000 cucumber beetles, which attack corn and other farm crops. Damage from the beetle and their larvae cost corn farmers as much as $1 billion a year.
The loss of such an insect-eating force could be devastating, Redell said. The approximate 1 million bats that have already died of white-nose syndrome in the last three years on the East Coast would have eaten 700,000 tons of insects were they still hunting the night skies, he said.
Bats perform other important tasks, too. Several Western species serve crucial roles as pollinators for desert plants such as agave and as seed dispersers for dozens of species of cacti.
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“I mean, this is like a mouse that flies, but it has the predatory capabilities of a polar bear,” Blehert said. “They are physically adapted to command the night sky. You’re talking about a little thing with a body less than half the size of your thumb whose heartbeat can get up to 1,000 beats a minute when they are flying but that can slow when they are hibernating in the winter to 4 beats a minute. And they live 20 to 25 years!”
Bats really are amazing and very valuable animals.
Related: Bats Are Dying in North-East USA – Nectar-Feeding Bats – Moth Jams Bat Sonar
Tags: animals,Economics,food,insects,Life Science,Science,science facts,Wisconsin
Friday Fun: Bristol Zoo’s Human Exhibit
Posted on September 4, 2009 Comments (2)
Photo of the Homo Sapiens zoo sign at the Bristol ZooA mysterious sign has appeared on the side of the Zoo’s popular Coral Café, designating the area as a place to spot one of the world’s most widespread species – Homo sapiens. The notice, which appeared without warning this week, shows humans ‘on display’ inside the café and includes tongue-in-cheek description of the species and its characteristics.
Zoo staff were surprised and amused to discover the new fixture. Dr Jo Gipps, Director of Bristol Zoo Gardens, said: “This is definitely not one of the Zoo’s own signs, it is clearly a prank and a very good one too. It looks completely genuine. We think it’s great sign and we have absolutely no intention of removing it, however I think one of them is probably enough.”
From the sign:
In adolescence, the offspring adopt a more nocturnal lifestyle and engage in ritualized activities of drinking fermented liquids and dancing to rhythmical sounds, which scientists believe may help them to find a mate.
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They are known to adopt other species as pets, particularly dogs (canis lupus familians) and cats (felis catus).
Related: Friday Cat Fun #10: Cat and Crow Friends – Adventurous Young Human – funny comic – Malaysian Shrew Survives on Beer – posts on animals
Why the World Needs More Engineers
Posted on September 3, 2009 Comments (1)
Why the World Needs More Engineers by Sir James Dyson
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Today, the focus is on sustainability and making products and technology that will spur on economic recovery. Three billion dollars have been invested in the National Science Foundation already this year. And the U.S. plans to put more money into science research than ever before.
This is encouraging. We need to take a long term view of how engineering fits into our lives – from education and training, to job creation. The US, like the UK, needs more science and math teachers. But we also need to renew interest in these vital and pioneering fields.
Related: Science, Engineering and the Future of the American Economy – Economic Strength Through Technology Leadership – The Future is Engineering
The Value of Displaying Data Well
Posted on September 1, 2009 Comments (1)

Anscombe’s quartet: all four sets are identical when examined statistically, but vary considerably when graphed. Image via Wikipedia.
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Anscombe’s quartet comprises four datasets that have identical simple statistical properties, yet are revealed to be very different when inspected graphically. Each dataset consists of eleven (x,y) points. They were constructed in 1973 by the statistician F.J. Anscombe to demonstrate the importance of graphing data before analyzing it, and of the effect of outliers on the statistical properties of a dataset.
Of course we also have to be careful of drawing incorrect conclusions from visual displays.
For all four datasets:
| Property | Value |
|---|---|
| Mean of each x variable | 9.0 |
| Variance of each x variable | 10.0 |
| Mean of each y variable | 7.5 |
| Variance of each y variable | 3.75 |
| Correlation between each x and y variable | 0.816 |
| Linear regression line | y = 3 + 0.5x |
Edward Tufte uses the quartet to emphasize the importance of looking at one’s data before analyzing it in the first page of the first chapter of his book, The Visual Display of Quantitative Information.
Related: Edward Tufte’s: Beautiful Evidence – Simpson’s Paradox – Correlation is Not Causation – Seeing Patterns Where None Exists – Great Charts – Playing Dice and Children’s Numeracy – Theory of Knowledge

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