Showing posts with label RSS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label RSS. Show all posts

What is the current best RSS reader?

After it was announced that Google Reader will be shut down in July, some of my Twitter buddies asked me what I plan to use in the future as a RSS reader.

I have already switched to RSS Owl.

Pros:

- faster and more powerful than Google Reader
- portable program that does not require installation (choose the version labeled "rssowl-2.1.6.windows.zip"). You can take it on a USB drive if you wish.
- keyboard shortcuts - you can either customize the existing shortcuts or create new ones
- social media sharing integration (Buffer, Twitter, Facebook, etc.)
- Easy export and import of your RSS subscriptions as an OPML file
- open source (just like WordPress, Firefox, WebKit, etc.)
- free

Cons:

- it is a downloadable program, not a website

For an online RSS reader, I would recommend Feedly in "Google Reader view". However, I prefer RSS Owl because it is faster and more customizable.

You can make Feedly look like Reader by going to preferences and changing "Default View" to "Condensed".

Why use RSS reader?

RSS is the most efficient way to collect information from multiple websites in one location. If you need to do that, that's the way to do it.

From Rex Hammock:

"I used to attempt to get my friends to use a newsreader. For whatever reason, most never quite got it. It’s one of the few things I use that I consider a competitive advantage and a tool I couldn’t operate professionally without. I decided to stop wasting time trying to give that secret away."

Please share your opinion via Twitter or in the comments section below.

References:

Google Reader was a Google Pigpen product | Rex Hammock's RexBlog.com http://bit.ly/XMB5A0
Which is the Best Alternative to Google Reader http://bit.ly/ZFKLKT

Comments from Twitter:

What is the current best RSS reader? http://bit.ly/WzPXST - I prefer the portable RSS Owl over online Feedly (quicker/custom kb shortcuts)

Beware of online "filters" that hide the information you need



Eli Pariser: Beware online "filter bubbles", TEDtalksDirector, May 2, 2011: As web companies strive to tailor their services (including news and search results) to our personal tastes, there's a dangerous unintended consequence: We get trapped in a "filter bubble" and don't get exposed to information that could challenge or broaden our worldview. Eli Pariser argues powerfully that this will ultimately prove to be bad for us and bad for democracy.

Similarly, you don't want Twitter to replace your RSS reader - always get to the original source. When you see a medical news item on Reuters or WebMD, don't stop there - always go to the original journal article. More often that not you will find that the results reported in the original article are a quite a bit more nuanced and less certain than the layman language, SEO-optimized headline that you first encountered. Always go to the source. If you write a blog, always link to the source.


The circle of online information (full version) (click to enlarge).

Related:

How to Subscribe to "What's New" Specialty Page of UpToDate? No Feed, No Problem for Google Reader

35% of UpToDate topics are updated every four months. The editors select a small number of the most important updates and share them via "What's new" page. These selections are changed with each major release of UpToDate, in March, July and November. See these updates by clicking on the specialty you are interested in.

The page does not provide RSS feed for the different specialties. One solution is to copy/paste the URL address of each subspecialty page you are interested in the Google Reader "Add a subscription" field (top left corner). Google Reader will automatically create a RSS feed from this "feedless" page.



References:
UTD Contents: What's New

How to follow Twitter users in Google Reader

In summary, @dreamingspires asked how you can follow more Twitter users without feeling overwhelmed with updates.

I only follow around 60 people on Twitter who in general do not post very frequently.

However, I follow more Twitter accounts in Google Reader which is actually nicer because I see the tweets grouped by user and I can use tags/folders. TweetDeck has groups but Google Reader is more efficient, it also has better search and saves all tweets. In addition, Google Reader is available from any Internet-connected computer while the current version of TweetDeck is only desktop-based. Seesmic has a web version but Google Reader is more efficient.



A screenshot of some of the medical Twitter feeds I subscribe to in Google Reader.

In short, you can expand the number of people you follow on Twitter by subscribing to their RSS feeds in Google Reader.

Currently, there is no tool that works better with large inflows of information than Google Reader in "condensed" view. Try switching the view modes in Google Reader by pressing the "1" and "2" keys.

@dreamingspires was concerned that interacting was not possible with the RSS feed but in fact it takes only 2 clicks - click on the tweet in Google Reader, which opens the Twitter page, and then click "reply".


The circle of online information (full version) (click to enlarge).

Related:
How to deal with the information overload from blogs, RSS and Twitter

How to make medical RSS aggregators better

The Problems with RSS

For some reason, RSS has not caught up with most physicians. My Google Reader is loaded with 350 RSS feeds that produce about 2,500 items per day, but I understand that this is not for everybody. We are too busy and it turns out that RSS concept is not that easy to grasp. Assembling RSS feeds in a reader takes time and effort.

Make Your Own "Medical Journal" with iGoogle Personalized Page


Make Your Own "Medical Journal" with iGoogle Personalized Page.

Two years ago, I described how you can Make Your Own "Medical Journal" with iGoogle Personalized Page and provided easy links to the feeds of the "Big Five" medical journals.

Since then, several medical RSS aggregators have launched that make the process of utilizing RSS for staying up-to-date much easier and even enjoyable.

PeRSSonalized Medicine by Webicina

PeRSSonalized Medicine by Webicina.com was one of the first services (but not the first) to arrange the medical journal feeds in a visually appealing way and make RSS consumption user-friendly.


PeRSSonalized Medicine by Webicina.com.

Kudos to Berci for achieving a significant user adoption which is not an easy task. Webicina.com also includes a feature which I call "create your own feed from PubMed search." There are no specialty-specific pages yet.

AllTop RSS-powered Magazine Concept

AllTop has condition-specific pages but most of them are geared toward the general public rather than health professionals, for example, see Alltop - Top Asthma News.


Alltop - Top Asthma News.

ClinicalReader for RSS

ClinicalReader WAS a medical RSS aggregator which launched at the end of June 2009. The service had a simple and easy to understand interface which was attractive and showcased the great benefits of using RSS to gather medical information.


ClinicalReader.com.

One of the best features of ClinicalReader was the specialty-specific pages which were very useful.

Updated on 07/14/2009: Apparently, the team of ClinicalReader advertised unverified endorsements on the website and had serious credibility issues with some prominent medical librarian bloggers. The service was discontinued soon after that. If interested in more details, please see the links below:

Clinical Reader: Starry ethics fail. Eagle Dawg Blog.
Malicious or stupid? You decide. Either way it doesn’t reflect well on Clinical Reader. (The) health informaticist.
Clinical Reader: from zero to negative sixty with one bogus threat. Steve Lawson.

Suggestions how to make medical RSS aggregators better

- Make a list of top 30 medical blogs. A top 10 or 15 list is too limiting and leaves many useful blogs out. A top 50 or a top 100 list is a "crowd" and few people will check all of them. Most of the leading blogs would be captured in a top 30 and the list would be manageable. This is really a "beginner reader" list which encourages them to explore further. There should also be lists of specialty-specific blogs (see more below).

- Make a list of top 30 medical Twitters.

- Make a list of the top blogs in each major specialty, for example, cardiology blogs, allergy blogs, etc. Be sure to separate physician/nurses blogs for those authored by patients. These multiple specialty-specific lists should be as inclusive as possible. See an example. Give a chance to everybody to be listed, even the A-bloggers were Z-bloggers when they first started. This way nobody should feel left out. Please include a list of medical librarians too - few people have contributed more to educating physicians about the benefits of Web 2.0 tools.

- Make a list of the top Twitters in each major specialty, for example, cardiology, nephrology, allergy, etc. This is a list of the "Top Twitter Doctors as a spreadsheet-wiki open to anybody to edit:



The suggestions how to make medical RSS aggregators better apply to all major medical journals. Users want a one-stop shop for medical information (see my notes from the NEJM Horizons conference for reference). BMJ already has a social network (doc-2-doc) albeit one that is scarcely populated. It would be easy to add a medical RSS aggregator as part of the social network. Lancet, NEJM, and JAMA should do the same.

It looks like "printed media" is going out of business fast and unless Kindle replaces it, not many people would be willing to visitto 7-10 different journal web pages to get the information the need. All major journals that are likely to survive, especially the ones funded by medical societies, will most likely have social networks or at least a medical RSS aggregator. The networks should be open, allowing easy export/import, and using Twitter/Google/Facebook Connect, etc. to avoid the need to remember more user names/passwords.

References:
Make Your Own "Medical Journal" with iGoogle Personalized Page
Lists of Medical Bloggers and Twitters Categorized by Specialty
NEJM Horizons Conference to Push Boundaries of Traditional Medical Publishing, Day 1

First NEJM article about Web 2.0 use in medicine? Harnessing the Web for Public Health Surveillance

From the NEJM:

"The Internet has become a critical medium for clinicians, public health practitioners, and laypeople seeking health information. Data about diseases and outbreaks are disseminated not only through online announcements by government agencies but also through informal channels, ranging from press reports to blogs to chat rooms to analyses of Web searches.

More recently, the advent of openly available news aggregators and visualization tools has spawned a new generation of disease-surveillance "mashups" (Web application hybrids) that can mine, categorize, filter, and visualize online intelligence about epidemics in real time.

The ease of use of blogs, mailing lists, RSS (Really Simple Syndication) feeds, and freely available mapping technology has meant that even an individual expert can create an important global resource."

References:
Digital Disease Detection — Harnessing the Web for Public Health Surveillance. NEJM, Volume 360:2153-2157 May 21, 2009 Number 21.
Influenza A (H1N1) Virus, 2009 — Online Monitoring. NEJM, Volume 360:2156 May 21, 2009 Number 21.
Image in the public domain.

How to deal with the information overload from blogs, RSS and Twitter?

A typical scenario:

You gradually increase the number of your RSS (Really Simple Syndication feeds) and Twitter subscriptions until you feel like "drowning" in a sea of information.

What to do? How to cope with the information overload?

A few tips from personal experience are listed below. Naturally, this writeup was provoked by a recent Twitter conversation.

Use Google Bookmarks to save useful links and control anxiety over information overload

Save all useful links in Google Bookmarks with labels "To Read", "To Blog," etc. Check the links a week later. You will realize that few from your saved links are worth a second look. This usually removes a large part of the anxiety over information overload.

Check your Twitter updates from last month or even last week. How many of them don't make much sense anymore? How many of them helped somebody? This also helps with the anxiety over information overload.

The key is to save the interesting links you find in a searchable database like Google Bookmarks. You can always look them up later.

You can export your Google Bookmarks at any time. Google does not lock up your data. Delicious.com, bought by the YouTube founders in April 2011 is an excellent alternative. However, Google has the advantage of a single signon for most of the services described in this article.

Use Google Reader to channel and manage large volumes of information

Channel most RSS feeds and high-volume Twitter users (more than 20 updates per day) through Google Reader. Use the "star" and "share" functions of Reader. Save to Google Bookmarks, and blog.

You don't have to read all RSS items in Google Reader (I have 500 RSS subscriptions which produce around 3,000 items per day). Just scan the headlines in Google Reader. Use folders for the ones you really want to read. I constantly switch between "condensed" and full view in Reader by using the keyboard shortcut "1" and "2".

I "star" or share the items in Google Reader that I would like to read later. The really valuable ones are saved in Google Bookmarks. Don't forget that Google Reader searches all the posts you received in you "inbox for the web". You can search only "starred" or shared posts, a particular feed, etc.

Try to "clear" your Google Reader unread items down to zero at the end of each day by following the simple sequence "bookmark, share, star, Twitter and blog. Done."

Twitter - how to control the "fire hydrant" flow of information

Twitter.com is inefficient for dealing with large volume of information. TweetDeck and Seesmic Web are better. Twitter search alerts and "subscribe to RSS" of individual users also work well. Twitter also takes time because if often requires you to click the shortened URL to see the source and full text. Google Reader extracts the full text (for full text feeds) or a snippet.

It takes approximately 2 hours a day to keep up with 200 RSS subscriptions, 100 Twitter accounts, and maintain the blog(s). It is doable, if you don't watch TV.

Centralize your online activities to gain full control over information flow

Centralize all files and links, etc. as much as possible. Make them searchable. Google services with backup is probably your best option at this time. I use Google Reader, Bookmarks, Blogger, Docs, Calendar, Gmail, Tasks. Make your information scanning and analysis centralized and as simple as possible. Use as few services as possible.

A circle of online information for maximum efficiency and impact

The circle of online information is as follows: Google Reader -> Share on Twitter -> Get feedback -> Write a blog post -> Share via RSS and Twitter -> Get feedback, go on.

Here is how to facilitate the Rise of the ePhysican who works hand in hand with the ePatient:



You may want to import your Twitter feed in Facebook as status updates by adding the Twitter application to Facebook.

Backup gives you peace of mind

I keep most my files and project in Google Docs. My browser of choice is Google Chrome with 5-6 extensions - RSS, Chromed Bird, password manager, Page Rank check, etc. If I can't install Chrome, I carry 2-3 portable browsers on a USB drive with favorite bookmarks or Chrome Sync. Good portable browsers include Chrome, Opera and Firefox.

I have an archive of scanned documents in PDF format, photos, video files, etc. that is backed up to Amazon S3, Amazon Cloud Drive and several external hard drives. The files are encrypted with 7zip and protected by 30-character unique passwords.

That's a start. If you have any suggestions, please share them in the comments below. If you have any questions, feel free to email me (the address is at the bottom of each page on this website).

References

How to Become a Super Tweeter in Just 15 Minutes a Day with iGoogle. MicroPersuasion, 2009.
Tips: How to Filter and Manage Your Online Social Life http://is.gd/vZnf
Information overload. Life in the Fast Lane, 2009.
Strategies for coping with information overload in medicine - the ostrich, the pigeon, and the owl strategy. BMJ, 2010.
Check the series "What I Read" by different people in The Atlantic (scroll to the bottom of the page to see other links) http://goo.gl/xWUb
Practical tips for better science blogging - check the comments: http://goo.gl/B1n9
Using Instapaper, RSS and Twitter to Create Your Internet Newspaper. Bridging the Nerd Gap, 2011.

Updated: 04/27/2011

Twitter Wins Over RSS?

Does Twitter win over RSS for most people who want to follow blogs and friends? I think so.

See a few thoughts (in reverse chronological order) below.

I think Kevin, M.D. was right about Twitter being easier to adopt than RSS for the non-tech crowd. Note: there is nothing wrong with "crowd" -- Wikipedia is based on the "wisdom of crowds."

goldenskye
goldenskye @AllergyNotes I see Twitter and RSS as complementary . Twitter may be more popular because it is faster, quicker , easier ..

Troy Anderson
troy_anderson @AllergyNotes that is an interesting observation, I think that the reason is the personal interaction aspect of it.

Ves Dimov, M.D.
AllergyNotes In summary, the trend seems to be that many popular bloggers have more Twitter than RSS subscribers nowadays.

Ves Dimov, M.D.
AllergyNotes It could be the personal interaction that makes Twitter more interesting than RSS or the need to "follow" somebody as a guide and example.

Ves Dimov, M.D.
AllergyNotes I still find it a bit hard to believe that "masses" find more value in Twitter than RSS but "people have spoken" - see @Berci subscr pattern

Ves Dimov, M.D.
AllergyNotes Doctor Anonymous has 324 RSS and 734 Twitter subscribers -- @kevinmd was right - Twitter is easier to get than RSS http://tinyurl.com/5mxwf5


References:
Twitter as RSS Reader? Will You Switch from Google Reader to Twitter?
Will Twitter Replace RSS?. TwiTip.

Related:
"Rest in Peace, RSS" by Steve Gillmor who uses Twitter instead, 2009.

Updated: 05/05/2009

Twitter as RSS Reader? Will You Switch from Google Reader to Twitter?

Twitter is a microblogging service where people answer the question "What are you doing?" via 140-character messages from their cellphone, laptop or desktop. Healthcare professionals use the service for all sorts of interesting discussions and one example is shown below:

Do you use Twitter as RSS reader? Has the RSS adoption already peaked? Will you switch from Google Reader to Twitter? Is RSS too complicated to be adopted by physicians?

The oldest post is at the bottom, the newest at the top:

ruraldoctoring
ruraldoctoring @kevinmd I believe you when you say RSS too imposing for some docs. That's why I think implementing EMR is going to be an uphill battle.

Vijay
scanman Important to remember: RSS is provider-independent whereas twitter IS A private company w/ all the potential to become the next MS/Google

kevinmd
kevinmd @ruraldoctoring "Poach tweet archive for blog fodder." I'd say I get 10-20% of my links and blog topics from Twitter now. That's way up.

kevinmd
kevinmd @ruraldoctoring RSS docs not representative of the majority of MDs. Many find RSS imposing. Twitter = easier to adopt for tech-phobic MDs.

ruraldoctoring
ruraldoctoring @scanman I'm just eavesdropping. This convo is too Web 2.0 for me. I'm still on Web 1.69.

Vijay
scanman Enjoying the twitter vs RSS conversation b/w Ves, Kevin, Carlos, Mike, Tim, Walter, Cerro & Theresa.

Vijay
scanman I'm beginning to think of twitter as a personal news aggregator. But it isn't likely to replace my feed reader

ruraldoctoring
ruraldoctoring I've never considered RSS as too complicated to grasp. Simplifying my collection of feeds is an ongoing headache.

ruraldoctoring
ruraldoctoring @scanman Twitter is still pretty idle for me, but never a time waster. I learn a lot on Twitter, mostly about tech that costs me $$$$$.
sandnsurf
sandnsurf Twitter has introduced me to new concepts, new people and new ideals - even in just a very short space of time. Chat yes, but not undirected

Vijay
scanman @ruraldoctoring I used to think of twitter as idle chatter & time waste. Not so anymore.
ruraldoctoring
ruraldoctoring <--Lacking sophistication, I still think of Twitter as innocent chat.

sandnsurf
sandnsurf RSS feed adoption peaking, or peaked? http://short.to/7tm

sandnsurf
sandnsurf @kevinmd like the 'adoption' for the masses thoughts. Technophobic docs not using RSS - more likely to use http://short.to/7tl or twitter
kevinmd
kevinmd @sandnsurf @AllergyNotes The noise factor is noted. Delicate balance, as you can expose your content here to those that may not read RSS.

sandnsurf
sandnsurf @AllergyNotes @kevinmd Agree with the twitter comments from you guys. Much rather post a comment here than on a blog
Ves Dimov, M.D.
AllergyNotes One can use Twitter to mine for information. See an example here: http://tinyurl.com/5uh3hl

Ves Dimov, M.D.
AllergyNotes People who would not take the time to comment on a blog post, reply on Twitter. It's quicker, simpler, more engaging and a huge time waster.

Ves Dimov, M.D.
AllergyNotes People who would not take the time to write a blog, post on Twitter.

Ves Dimov, M.D.
AllergyNotes Twitter is interesting because of its social interaction layer and "personal touch." More spontaneous also.

Ves Dimov, M.D.
AllergyNotes If a Twitter feed becomes noisy (many links/posts, etc), I unsubscribe. May move the same feed to Google Reader rather than reading it here.

Ves Dimov, M.D.
AllergyNotes @kevinmd Re: "I think Twitter is an easier adoption for the masses than RSS." I agree.

kevinmd
kevinmd @allergynotes Key word is "potential". I think Twitter is an easier adoption for the masses than RSS. Just my 2 cents.

Ves Dimov, M.D.
AllergyNotes @kevinmd Re: "Twitter has the potential to replace RSS" My Google Reader has 600 feeds, many of them with multiple posts per day....

kevinmd
kevinmd @AllergyNotes I'm following a small, but growing, percentage of blogs through their Twitter feeds. Agree with http://bit.ly/aWh5x, point 5.

kevinmd
kevinmd @AllergyNotes "Trying not use Twitter as RSS reader." Going to disagree with you there. Twitter has the potential to replace RSS.

Ves Dimov, M.D.
AllergyNotes @kevinmd Re: "I started following most of them" I already follow too many people (42). Trying not use Twitter as RSS reader... :-)


Related:
"Rest in Peace, RSS" by Steve Gillmor who uses Twitter instead, 2009.

Updated: 05/05/2009

Video: How to Use Google RSS Reader

Google Reader and Bloglines are probably the best web-based RSS readers. If you do not already use one, the videos below will show you how you can start and, most importantly, why you should be using a RSS reader.


Google Reader Intro


Google Reader: Getting Started


How To Use Google Reader


Using RSS and Google Reader


Google Reader Keyboard Shortcuts

References:
Best Web Feeds Reader for Medical and General Information
Data Mining Google Reader Feeds for Trends

Job Search: There's a feed for that?!

An example of power of RSS feeds from Google Reader blog:

"I was having a hard time finding the right job here in Houston. Days would go by without talking to a single recruiter. But then I started using Google Reader to subscribe to custom-made job search feeds for Craigslist, and for oodle.com (which already aggregates feeds from thousands of other classified ad websites).

Soon I found myself flying all over the country interviewing for jobs. The employers always pay for the flights, hotels, rental cars, etc. My job hunt became like an exciting vacation! I've been to New York twice, Milwaukee, Austin, Los Angeles, and Miami. I just accepted an offer in Manhattan with a very competitive salary offer. Google Reader saved me a huge amount of time and effort with the job hunt."

I wonder if you can use the same approach when searching for a job as a physician.

References:
There's a feed for that?! Google Reader blog.

AllTop Health: a news aggregator of all top health stories on one page

Alltop is "a news aggregation site that provides “all the top” stories for 40 of the most popular topics on the Web. The headlines and first paragraph of the 5 most recent stories from 40-80 sources for each topic are displayed. Alltop stories are refreshed approximately every 10 minutes."

Click here for Alltop health stories which include news stories and blogs. Overall, it is an interesting and useful concept although not new. The forgotten Findory news aggregator had a similar approach. Alltop does not look very different from iGoogle populated with health-related RSS feeds. Google News service has a similar interface and I especially like the slick image view. In any case, I rarely have time to check more than the subscribed feeds in Google Reader in the condensed "list view." This is usually sufficient to stay up-to-date with most news stories.


Alltop: Guy Kawasaki's Newest Venture in Social Media

Alltop is powered entirely by RSS feeds but it does not provide feeds itself.

References:
Announcing (Formally) Alltop. How to Change the World.
Alltop: Guy Kawasaki's Newest Venture in Social Media. PodTech.
Google News Image View: Allergy. Allergy Notes.

Related:
NewsFlashr Health is a similar aggregator to AllTop.

Updated: 05/17/2008

RSS Feeds and Podcasts from American Academy of Family Physicians

American Family Physician (AFP) is the official journal of the American Academy of Family Physicians and although it does not publish any original research, the journal is a good source of review articles and practical advice.

I had used a Pubmed workaround to get RSS feeds for the new articles from AFP but recently noted that the academy website has started offering RSS and podcast feeds:

RSS Feeds from AAFP News Now

Available Podcasts from the AAFP

The Continuing Medical Education (CME) podcast seems the most useful one among the 3 podcasts offered currently.

References:
Make Your Own "Medical Journal" with iGoogle Personalized Page
Share iGoogle Tabs with Medical Journals, Podcasts and Gadgets
Get RSS Feeds for Any Medical Journal from Pubmed

Too many feeds to read? Time to trim down RSS subscriptions

Web feeds readers have truly become an "inbox for the web." Until recently, I was subscribed to about 600 web sites, blogs, medical journals, podcasts and persistent searches. With so many feeds to read, information overload became a real issue, and I trimmed down the number of RSS subscriptions significantly this month.


Image is licensed under Creative Commons.


Video: RSS in Plain English

Related:
Dealing with Information Overload. LifeHack.org
Best Web Feeds Reader for Medical and General Information
How to Read Blog Articles Written Only By Your Favorite Bloggers. Digital Inspiration, 02/2008.
Troubleshooting RSS addiction: a blogger finds freedom in a world without feeds. Download Squad, 04/2008.
Check the series "What I Read" by different people in The Atlantic (scroll to the bottom of the page to see other links) http://goo.gl/xWUb

Updated: 04/23/2008

"MedWorm Associates" Promote RSS Use Among Physicians and Researchers

What is a MedWorm Associate?

From their website: "MedWorm Associates have one uniting objective - to promote the use of RSS amongst physicians and those in medical research."

Currently, there are associates in:

Pathology
Orthopaedics
Psychology
Pediatrics
Health, Medicine and and Bioethics Commentators
Medical Databases and Libraries
Genetics

You can become a MedWorm Associate too if you are interested in the following:

"1. Keeping an eye on their specialty in MedWorm, by looking through the feeds that are listed in that specialty, asking for feeds to be removed from that specialty when they are not appropriate and making suggestions for new feeds (eg. any major publications that are missing or medical associations).

2. Commenting on items in their specialty, thus stimulating MedWorm discussions. Associates should aim to make one comment per month.

3. Making suggestions on ways to further develop MedWorm and work in partnership with other sites, in particular their own site(s)."

Two of the bloggers I follow are associates: Berci Mesko and David Rothman.

Image source: MedWorm

7 Creative Uses for RSS

Six Creative Uses for RSS. eMarketing & New Media.

1. Subscribe to a custom News RSS feed
2. Develop an RSS Feed for your non-blog site
3. Use eBay’s RSS option
4. Watch for new music on iTunes
5. Keep an eye on your personal brand- your name
6. Subscribe to others’ del.icio.us bookmarks

Here is one more creative use of RSS (for a total of 7):

YouTube Feeds. Google Operating System.

YouTube has never offered too many feeds and they were usually difficult to find. The new YouTube API changed that, but the feeds are still inaccessible from the interface. Google Operating System compiled a list of the most useful YouTube feeds you may want to add in your favorite feed reader.

Related:
Make Your Own "Medical Journal" with iGoogle Personalized Page
Share iGoogle Tabs with Medical Journals, Podcasts and Gadgets
Best Web Feeds Reader for Medical and General Information
It's Brilliant: Continuous search engine queries for public health
Get RSS Feeds for Any Medical Journal from Pubmed
RSS Feeds for the Cleveland Clinic

Interesting Journal Articles

Editorial: Meat Consumption and Cancer Risk.
Jeanine M. Genkinger, Anita Koushik. PLoS Medicine, 12/2007.

According to A Prospective Study of Red and Processed Meat Intake in Relation to Cancer Risk, elevated risks (20-60%) were evident for esophageal, colorectal, liver, and lung cancer, comparing individuals in the highest with those in the lowest quintile of red meat intake. Individuals in the highest quintile of processed meat intake had a 20% elevated risk for colorectal and a 16% elevated risk for lung cancer. In conclusion, both red and processed meat intakes were associated with increased risk of cancers of the colorectum and lung. Red meat intake was associated with an elevated risk for cancers of the esophagus and liver.

Systematic Review: Comparative Effectiveness of Treatments to Prevent Fractures in Men and Women with Low Bone Density or Osteoporosis.
Catherine MacLean et al. Annals of Int Medicine, 01/2008.

Authors conclude that good evidence suggests that bisphosphonates, estrogen, parathyroid hormone, and raloxifene prevent vertebral fractures more than placebo; evidence for calcitonin was fair. Good evidence suggests that bisphosponates prevent hip fractures more than placebo. The effects of vitamin D varied with dose. Raloxifene, estrogen, and estrogen–progestin increased the risk for thromboembolic events.

Systematic Review: Comparative Effectiveness of Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors and Angiotensin II Receptor Blockers for Treating Essential Hypertension.
David B. Matchar et al. Annals of Int Medicine, 01/2008.

Which class is better -- ACEi or ARB? According to this meta-analysis, ACE inhibitors and ARBs had similar long-term effects on blood pressure. No consistent differential effects were observed for other outcomes (infrequently studied over the long term), including death, cardiovascular events, lipid levels, progression to diabetes, left ventricular function, and kidney disease. may have a slight edge because ACE inhibitors were associated with a greater risk for cough. Fewer withdrawals due to adverse events and greater persistence with therapy tended to favor ARBs over ACE inhibitors.

Related editorial: Inhibitors of the Renin–Angiotensin System: Proven Benefits, Unproven Safety. Patrick S. Parfrey.

Meta-analysis: Effect of Monotherapy and Combination Therapy with Inhibitors of the Renin–Angiotensin System on Proteinuria in Renal Disease.
Regina Kunz et al. Annals of Int Medicine, 01/2008.

ARBs reduce proteinuria to a similar degree as ACE inhibitors. The combination of the 2 drugs (ACEi + ARB) seems to reduce proteinuria more than either drug alone.

Achieving a High-Performance Health Care System with Universal Access: What the United States Can Learn from Other Countries.
American College of Physicians, Annals of Int Medicine, 01/2008.

One Step Forward, Two Steps Back — Will There Ever Be an AIDS Vaccine?
Robert Steinbrook, M.D. NEJM, 12/2007.

Related article: Antibody-Based HIV-1 Vaccines: Recent Developments and Future Directions. PLoS Medicine, 12/2007.

The Challenges of Chagas Disease— Grim Outlook or Glimmer of Hope. Rick L. Tarleton, Richard Reithinger, Julio A. Urbina, Uriel Kitron, Ricardo E. Gürtler. PLoS Medicine, 12/2007. -- Chagas disease spreads in a particularly "disgusting" way: by kissing bugs that bite people's faces at night http://buff.ly/1pcdA2Z

A time efficient way to stay up-to-date with medical literature

"How do you eat in elephant? In small bites." The same rule probably applies to staying current with the ever expanding avalanche of medical literature. One can try the following approach:

1. Subscribe the to the RSS feeds of the 5 major medical journals (NEJM, JAMA, BMJ, Lancet and Annals) plus 2-3 subpecialty journals in your field of interest.


Medical Journals tab: A screenshot of iGoogle with RSS feeds from the major medical journals.

2. Read the journal on the day it is published online, for example, NEJM on Wednesdays.

3. Use text-to-speech to listen to articles you do not have time to read.

4. Listen to journal podcasts. Click here to subscribe the podcasts of the 4 major journals in iGoogle.

Related:
Make Your Own "Medical Journal" with iGoogle Personalized Page
Share iGoogle Tabs with Medical Journals, Podcasts and Gadgets
Annals of Internal Medicine Launches Podcast and Audio Summaries
Text-to-Speech Programs and Continuous Medical Education

Updated: 01/12/2008