Author Archives
Joe Alcock
Emergency Physician, Educator, Researcher, interested in the microbiome, evolution, and medicine
“Despite the evidence that fever can serve a protective function, old habits die hard, ” so wrote Blumenthal in 1997. Old habits about fever are indeed hard to shake, and this may be particularly so in a pandemic, where history’s lessons and hard-earned knowledge from epidemiology, evidence-based medicine, and good […]
Estimated reading time: 5 minutes
I don’t usually teach evolutionary medicine in the Spring. In fact, I was originally scheduled to be in Kauai, hiking the Kalalau trail with a group of wilderness medicine students this April. Alas, that trip, and this year’s whole wilderness medicine elective, were not to be. Many students who would […]
Estimated reading time: 5 minutes
When I first started reading about the coronavirus epidemic in Wuhan China, I had returned from a trip to Japan, and my first thought was: “we will all start wearing masks” as is customary for many Japanese. A few weeks later, I was dismayed to see almost none of my […]
Estimated reading time: 8 minutes
A belated Happy New Year to you, readers of Evolution Medicine! In 2020 I am introducing a new new initiative – the Bad Microbiome Project. Pictured above is a member of the Enterobacteriaceae family – E. coli – a prototypical bad microbe. The bad microbiome project is an exploration of […]
Estimated reading time: 4 minutes
Life History Theory, a concept first described by Yale evolutionary biologist Stephen Stearns, is the application of evolutionary biology to the entire life cycle from birth to death. It includes the hypothesis that features of life are shaped by natural selection in ways that might have maximized fitness (in the […]
Estimated reading time: 8 minutes
The Evolutionary Medicine Elective for UNM Medical Students starts again this week. We will begin by discussing this paper by Steve Stearns: Evolutionary medicine: its scope, interest, and potential. Read that article carefully prior to the first session. Week 1 (session one) will focus on a) life history theory, […]
Estimated reading time: 1 minute
Is your microbiome value-added? Does it provide benefits to your health and well-being? Does it produce vitamins and help with your digestion? Does it educate your immune system and prevent infection? Unless you are hospitalized in the intensive care unit or suffering severe or critical illness, the answer is likely […]
Estimated reading time: 11 minutes
As a public health problem, sepsis is a stubborn and serious problem. It is a leading cause of mortality for hospitalized patients. Deaths from sepsis are increasing, not decreasing, so it is unlike other leading causes of death such as cardiovascular disease. Despite many decades of intense research and clinical […]
Estimated reading time: 5 minutes
Paul E. Pepe came to the our department today to discuss his long history of clinical research in emergency medicine, pre-hospital medicine, and critical care. Dr. Pepe was one of the authors of the influential 1994 Bickell paper in the New England Journal. That paper, which was published when I […]
Estimated reading time: 7 minutes
Cars kill a lot of people. We see the consequences every day in the ER. The two most common sources of accidental deaths in New Mexico – automobile accidents and drug overdoses – can be thought of as resulting from mismatch between human neurobiology and modern environment. Mismatch between the […]
Estimated reading time: 2 minutes