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About this blog

the Department of Brilliant Ideas - that is where I work 
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Entries in this blog

I am a "project-oriented" person, i.e. I get a lot of "brilliant ideas", and try to realize some of them. With variable success/failure. Another side of this personality trait is that I get bored quite easily, if things get... boring The latest project I took the initiative is... a large Swedish charity foundation for peri-/neonatal research: Lilla barnets fond (Small child foundation). We (me, five other neonatologists, and one premie-parent) are just about to finish the formal paperwork an
Our latest research paper, about low birth weight and later risk of developing type 2 diabetes, was recently published in Epidemiology. (Abstract - click here!) I feel relieved, it was a lot of hard work to do the study, and not the least, to get it published. Therefore, I got happy when Reuters News Agency wrote about it (click here or here to read the article!) There are many reports showing a link between low birth weight and type 2 diabetes; the lower the birth weight, the higher the ri
The Olympic games are over, and I am leaving the TV sofa. In spite of the politicopropagandistic extravaganzas, I think the games were great: lots of fighting spirit, fantastic achievements, the chaotic mix of emotions. Some people were winners (probably not only those who travelled home with gold medals), and some people felt like losers (also some with medals in their luggage, I'm sure). Although sports is only a small part of life (for most of us) I think sports contains most bits and piec
I recently read an article about Haruki Murakami, a Japanese novelist. I had never heard of him before but this man is a literature "Mega-star"! (Which tells more about me than about the fame of Murakami) While reading about Murakami, I felt this is a good person. We had things in common! Integrity. Sense of humour. Wife's always right. Likes jogging and vinyl records. And Twin Peaks. So, I bought his book "Kafka on the Shore" to bring on our summer holiday trip. I have only read the fir
"Get real - get online" - that seems to apply also to newborn infants! Our hospital (with the largest number of newborns/year, in Sweden at least) as adopted an increasingly popular feature - web-babies! There's a camera installed below the roof in the waiting room for the doctors health check - parents can just put their newborn baby below it, press the "click" button and then the "get online" button. Good or bad... I guess, not too bad anyway http://www.ds.se/Web/NormalPage____42
Most of us want to become parents. But, is it a human right to reproduce? Some people may argue in favour, but I am not sure I would. Despite the importance of reproduction itself (for all species, incl mammalians like Homo Sapiens), nothing can be taken for granted. In neonatal medicine we know that normality is not a 100% state, sometimes the other side of the coin shows up too. Generally, I would argue that we regard expecting and having children in a more respectful way. At l
While biking home from work tonight I thought about my blogging habit, or, the lack of a blogging habit! I figured... blogging is the art of being present. And there has not been much time for x-tras the last few weeks. I have been heavily involved in the update of the forum software (as you may have noticed... soon we will officially announce a lot of new features...), and clinical work has been demanding. But, as the summer is here, things tend to slow down and I hope to be more present.
I live through a kind of refractory post-doc phase. I defended my thesis last Friday (080418), managed pretty well , the party in the evening was wild and crazy , and I am about to adapt to the new life of being 'MD PhD'. I think I need to 'digest' what has happened. The last few nights, I have had some really strange dreams about things that did (and did not) happen that day. I guess Freud would be delighted to hear about this... It feels good to be back in business again. I am sure some
Yesterday I approved the final proof for my thesis book "Very preterm birth - etiological aspects and short and long term outcomes". It is being printed right NOW and I will have a LARGE stack of books by next week. Will post a photograph. My latest years of hard work and psychological tension will have the ISBN nb 978-91-7357-498-3 If you spend a day in Stockholm on the 18th of April, welcome to my dissertation in Leksellsalen, Karolinska University Hospital. Grand thesis defence in the
This is my list for 2007... Best research experience... our brilliant study on twins, their birth weights and later risk of type-2 diabetes Worst research experience... four rejections of the manuscript of the brilliant study above... (NEJM, Lancet, JAMA, Diabetes...) Best neonatal gossip... how the family Zlatan Ibrahimovic escaped the paparazzi photographers from the maternity ward... (well, this is from 2006, but I heard the story just recently) Most fascinating journey...
When speaking to people in non-medical professions about daily life in neonatal care, many people wonder how we cope with everything. This remarkable mix of well-baby-nursery problems, medical and ethical issues in the NICU... and all parents... and their fear, anger and happiness. I do not really know what to respond to such questions, but a bit of the answer might be related to how we combine a rational mind with empathic capabilities. I mean, when standing in front of a newly delivered 25
Heard from a colleague of a rough weekend on-call, in a unit somewhere out there. Generally, for myself I like working really hard... I feel good after a bit of mental flow and manual work But the weekend I was told about must have been hard, as indicated by the number of pediatric subspecialties and units that were also involved: oncology surgery anestesiology nephrology radiology transfusion medicine infectious diseases ECMO... Reflections... professional networks are no
Welcome to the 99nicu Blogs! Given the possibilities to share experiences, thoughts and opinions through a blog, we could not resist to add the latest feature of the software (vBulletin) used for the 99nicu forums. As a 99nicu member, you can start your own neonatal blog here! And write comments in blogs written by other members. Read the announcement in the News forum, download the blog manual and... get started! PS. If you are unfamiliar with blogging, take a look at blogbasics.co

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