Showing posts with label cancer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cancer. Show all posts

Thursday, November 14, 2019

Productivity measures for the increase in life expectancy


In my previous post in this blog I spoke about the article entitled Are ideas getting harder to find? which can be downloaded from the Stanford University website. In this paper, the authors also analyze the increase in life expectancy in the USA and the effort necessary to achieve it, and reach the following results:

Thursday, January 10, 2019

Monitoring scientific news in the general press

Illustration of the
initial news
Sometimes the general press is accused of opening up great expectations about scientific discoveries and forgetting about them when reality puts a brake on expectations. In other posts I have criticized this. That’s why I’m happy to be able to give an example of the impeccable follow-up of a specific scientific news, performed during a decade by a media outlet (the Spanish newspaper La Vanguardia).
The initial news appeared on May 9, 2005 on pages 29 and 30 with the following headlines:
The text echoed the discovery of drugs that act by inhibiting the action of a gene (EGFR), whose deleterious mutation can lead to the appearance of cancer (disordered multiplication of cells).
Over the next 10 years, this news received the following follow up in La Vanguardia: