Livin' on the MDedge

Early retirement and the terrible, horrible, no good, very bad cognitive decline


 

The only hall of fame that really matters

LOTME loves the holiday season – the food, the gifts, the radio stations that play nothing but Christmas music – but for us the most wonderful time of the year comes just a bit later. No, it’s not our annual Golden Globes slap bet. Nope, not even the “excitement” of the College Football Playoff National Championship. It’s time for the National Inventors Hall of Fame to announce its latest inductees, and we could hardly sleep last night after putting cookies out for Thomas Edison. Fasten your seatbelts!

The wall of inventors at the National Inventors Hall of Fame National Inventors Hall of Fame
  • Robert G. Bryant is a NASA chemist who developed Langley Research Center-Soluble Imide (yes, that’s the actual name) a polymer used as an insulation material for leads in implantable cardiac resynchronization therapy devices.
  • Rory Cooper is a biomedical engineer who was paralyzed in a bicycle accident. His work has improved manual and electric wheelchairs and advanced the health, mobility, and social inclusion of people with disabilities and older adults. He is also the first NIHF inductee named Rory.
  • Katalin Karikó, a biochemist, and Drew Weissman, an immunologist, “discovered how to enable messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) to enter cells without triggering the body’s immune system,” NIHF said, and that laid the foundation for the mRNA COVID-19 vaccines developed by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna. That, of course, led to the antivax movement, which has provided so much LOTME fodder over the years.
  • Angela Hartley Brodie was a biochemist who discovered and developed a class of drugs called aromatase inhibitors, which can stop the production of hormones that fuel cancer cell growth and are used to treat breast cancer in 500,000 women worldwide each year.

We can’t mention all of the inductees for 2023 (our editor made that very clear), but we would like to offer a special shout-out to brothers Cyril (the first Cyril in the NIHF, by the way) and Louis Keller, who invented the world’s first compact loader, which eventually became the Bobcat skid-steer loader. Not really medical, you’re probably thinking, but we’re sure that someone, somewhere, at some time, used one to build a hospital, landscape a hospital, or clean up after the demolition of a hospital.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Many specialists are on the wrong side of the patient-jargon relationship
MDedge Pediatrics
The truth of alcohol consequences
MDedge Pediatrics
Have you heard the one about the emergency dept. that called 911?
MDedge Pediatrics
Give bacterial diversity a chance: The antibiotic dichotomy
MDedge Pediatrics
Looking for a healthy meat substitute? Consider the potato
MDedge Pediatrics
Everyone wins when losers get paid
MDedge Pediatrics
Have you heard the one about the cow in the doctor’s office?
MDedge Pediatrics
All the National Health Service wants for Christmas is tea and biscuits
MDedge Pediatrics
Bad breath? Mouthwash is out. Yogurt is in.
MDedge Pediatrics
Medical practice gave 8,000 patients cancer for Christmas
MDedge Pediatrics