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Doctor Google To The OR Please

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The British Medical Journal published a research paper on the benefits of using Google for researching medical conditions, but anyone who has been reading Dilbert creator Scott Adams' blog since March already knew this.

Doctor Google To The OR Pleasediscovered a search on Google could benefit doctors would have been saved had they simply added the thoughts of a cartoonist to their RSS feed readers earlier in 2006. More importantly, will the British Medical Journal receive the kind of posted in 2006 how a baffling voice problem left him unable to speak above a whisper in one on one conversations. He also suffered from an equally strange hand problem when trying to draw on paper. A string of doctors were unable to help him until Google came to the rescue: I dried off and Googled "dystonia" - the name for my hand problem, plus "voice." Bingo. There's a rare neurological condition called a spasmodic dysphonia with voice symptoms identical to mine....There's even a propensity for this condition to pair with another dystonia, like the one in my hand. Eventually, as the medical protocol worked its way out, I found my way to a neurologist who specializes in my alleged rare neurological disorder. She listened to me for about 30 seconds and said essentially "Yup. That's it." Google was right. The good news is that I wasn't nuts. The better news is that there is a well-established treatment. The bad news is that the treatment is not fun. I'll spare our readers who may be lingering over this article while enjoying one for the road, Pop Tarts, or afternoon tea depending on your time zone the details about the treatment. Just follow the link above to the Dilbert Blog to learn more. Now all we have to worry about is if Google will start charging us a co-pay if we start using it regularly for researching illnesses. (We're going to guess 'no' here.) Tag: Add to Del.icio.us | Digg | Reddit | Furl Bookmark Murdok: David Utter is a staff writer for Murdok covering technology and business.

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