Saturday morning round-up

I usually don't do these kinds of linkfests but we're on the road for a Pharmboy family Easter weekend and there are a few items of interest that slipped through my fingers recently. Here are a few things that readers may enjoy this weekend:

Bora's blog gets its 1,000,000th visitor
Go over and offer congratulations to Mr Community.

Get a tetanus shot first, and be sure to use clean nails.
Adding new meaning to "get off the cross, someone else needs the wood," WSJ Health Blog alerts us to ritual crucifixions in the Philippines. By the way, belated congratulations to our Health Blog colleagues Scott Hensley, Jacob Goldstein, et al., on their first blogiversary last Friday!

NYT covers PZ Myers/Richard Dawkins bait-and-switch at Expelled! showing
This week's buzz o' the blogosphere gets picked up by the Gray Lady - Prof Myers original post here and follow-up here. This is a movie, right, not a President Bush event?

Nutritional 'profiling' to sell supplements: corruption of British academics?
Frank at SciencePunk details a scam in England that is also rampant in the US - companies that offer to do "nutritional profiling" based on standard clinical chemistry measurements but where they use a range of normal values much wider than that established in medicine. Statistically, any healthy person will have some values outside these wider, arbitrary "nutritional" ranges that are then interpreted by the "laboratory" as indicators of "poor protein digestion" and other nonsense. Not surprising, such testing laboratories will offer a variety of dietary supplements for sale to remedy these deficiencies and dysfunctions.

Shi V Liu, MD, PhD on Nature's "grandee-grantees" (scroll down through comments)
Prolific author and journal editor holds forth on multi-grant awardees, scientific misconduct, and other conspiracies. Oh, dear - this could keep you busy all weekend.

Enjoy!

More like this

Scott Hensley, editor of the WSJ Health Blog, just reminded me that his colleague and blog lead writer, Jacob Goldstein, put together a neat slideshow on the fluorescent marine proteins for which this year's Nobel Prize in Chemistry was awarded. I've been a bit behind in my reading of other blogs…
Nanotechnology is getting some attention these days. Revere at Effect Measure (which just celebrated its third blogiversary!) gauges the level of alarm about nanotechnology; at Science Progress, Michael Peroski looks at the current regulatory framework for nanotechnology, while Justin Masterman…
Just a quick note of congratulations to friends of Terra Sig (FOTS, if you will) on earning 2008 Awards for Excellence in Health Care Journalism from the Association of Health Care Journalists (AHCJ). Online FIRST: M.B. Pell, Jim Morris and Jillian Olsen, Center for Public Integrity, "Perils of the…
As I have stated many times before, this blog has brought me some personal experiences and friendships I would have never had in my life as "just" a lab scientist and pharmacology professor. Among the most cordial relationships I have had online with a professional journalist has been with Scott…