Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Mesothelioma Still Highest Paying Google Adsense Keyword

According to Cyberwiremesothelioma‘ is still the highest paying keyword on Google Adsense. Cyberwire has recently compiled a list of the top 230 highest paying Google AdSense terms. It appears that the highest paying terms are all centered around hiring a lawyer, refinancing your home, mortgages, and loans. These are the top 5 terms on their list:

$54.33 mesothelioma lawyers
$47.79 what is mesothelioma
$47.72 peritoneal mesothelioma
$47.25 consolidate loans
$47.16 refinancing mortgage

As you can see the top 3 terms all contain the keyword mesothelioma, personally I’ve never understood why ads on the malignant tumor pays so well. Surely high-powered tech companies would pay much more for exposure to their site than ‘mesothelioma lawyers’? I also find the CPC (cost per click) value of those terms very doubtful. The idea that anyone would pay almost $50 just for someone to click and visit their site seems extremely unlikely to me.

The people at Cyberwire claims to have used this tool to search for the current CPC for keywords. What really caught my attention was the way the profit-minded peeps at cyberwire link all of the terms on the list to news search results… along with some adsense ads on the page :P. I’d say that’s a pretty cunning ploy to get people to click on your ads that also happen to be related to the highest paying keywords.

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Mesothelioma Specialists

Mesothelioma Specialists

Choosing a doctor that is right for you can make all the difference in your treatment experience. Below are doctors with national and international reputations for their work with mesothelioma patients. The American Cancer Society has provided a checklist of topics to consider and questions to ask your doctor which may be helpful in choosing a doctor as your treating physician or to get a second opinion.


Alabama

Dr. Robert J. Cerfolionia
UAB Medical Center, The Kirklin Clinic
619 19th Street South
Birmingham, AL 35249
(205) 934-9999

Dr. Cerfolio is Assistant Professor at the University of Alabama Medical Center with a specialty in Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery.


California

Dr. David M. Jablons
Box 1674, UCSF
San Francisco, CA 94143-1674
Contact: (415) 885-3882
E-mail: jablonsd@surgery.ucsf.edu

Dr. Jablons is Chief of General Thoracic Surgery at the University of California, San Francisco-Mount Zion Medical Center; a Program Leader of Thoracic Oncology at the UCSF Comprehensive Cancer Center; an Associate Professor of Surgery and UCSF- Mount Zion Medical Center, and holds the ADA endowed chair in Thoracic Oncology. Dr. Jablons’ treatment and research specialties includes the treatment of pleural mesothelioma with pleurectomy/decortication.

Dr. Thierry Jahan
UCSF, Box 1705, Cancer Center 7th Fl.
San Francisco, CA 94143
Contact: (415) 353-9888
E-mail: thierry.jahan@ucsfmedctr.org

Dr. Jahan is a Clinical Assistant Professor at UCSF Medical Center and a Thoracic Cancer Specialist.

Dr. Mark Lischner
2 Medical Plaza, Suite 100
Roseville, CA 95661
Contact: (916) 786-7498

Dr. Robert Cameron
Dept. of Surgery, UCLA Medical School
Center for the Health Sciences, Rm 62-215
Box 951741
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1741
Contact: (310) 794-7333
E-mail: rcameron@surgery.medsch.ucla.edu

Dr. Cameron is the Director of Thoracic Oncology, Department of Surgery, at the UCLA Medical Center; Chief of General Thoracic Surgery at the Wadsworth Veterans Administration Hospital; and an Assistant Professor of Cardiothoracic Surgery and Surgical Oncology at UCLA. Dr. Cameron has extensive experience treating mesothelioma patients.


Connecticut

Dr. Mark Cullen
135 College Street, Rm. 366
New Haven, CT 06510
Contact: (203) 785-6434
E-mail: markcullen@yale.edu

Dr. Cullen is the Director of Yale’s Occupational and Environmental Medicine Program and a Professor of Medicine and Public Health at Yale University School of Medicine.


Washington, D.C.

Dr. Paul Sugarbaker
Sugarbaker Oncology Associates
Washington Cancer Institute CG-175
100 Irving Street, N.W
Washington, D.C. 20010
Contact: (202) 877-3908

Dr. Sugarbaker is the Director of Surgical Oncology at the Washington Cancer Institute. He specializes in treatment of peritoneal mesothelioma.


Florida

Dr. Lary Robinson
H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center & Research Institute
12902 Magnolia Drive
Tampa, FL 33612
Contact: (813) 972-8412

Dr. Robinson is the Director of Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery at H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center & Research Institute. He offers a Multi-Disciplinary method of treatment for malignant mesothelioma.


Illinois

Hedy Kindler, MD
5841 S. Maryland Ave.
MC 2115
Chicago, IL 60637
Contact: (773) 702-6149
E-mail:hkindler@medicine.bsd.uchicago.edu

Dr. Kindler is the Medical Director of GI Oncology at University of Chicago Medical Center and an Assistant Professor of Medicine at the University of Chicago.


Maryland

Dr. Stephen C. Yang
The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
601 North Caroline Street
Baltimore, Maryland 21287
Phone: (410) 614-3891
E-mail: syang@jhmi.edu

Stephen C. Yang, M.D. is Associate Professor of Surgery and Oncology at The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and an attending surgeon at both The Johns Hopkins Hospital and The Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center. Dr. Yang graduated from Duke University with a B.A. in Chemistry and received his M.D. degree from the Medical College of Virginia. He completed his general surgery residency at the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, and finished his cardiothoracic surgery fellowship at the Medical College of Virginia. He also completed a 3 year thoracic surgical oncology research fellowship at the University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center.


Massachusetts

Dr. Elizabeth Healy Baldini
Brigham & Women’s Hospital
Radiation Oncology
75 Francis Street, ASB1-L2
Boston, MA 02115
Contact: (617) 732-6313

Dr. Baldini is a thoracic surgeon at Carole M. & Philip L. Lowe Thoracic Oncology Program at Dana Farber Cancer Institute/Brigham & Women’s Hospital, and Associate Professor of Radiation Oncology at Harvard Medical School.

Dr. Jeanne M. Lukanich
Brigham & Women’s Hospital
Department of Surgery, Thoracic Surgery
75 Francis Street
Boston, MA 02115
Contact: (617) 732-5922
E-mail: jmlukanich@bics.bwh.harvard.edu

Dr. Lukanich is a thoracic surgeon and the Clinical Director of Lung Transplant Service at Brigham & Women’s Hospital, as well as an instructor in surgery at Harvard Medical School.

Dr. Arthur T. Skarin
Dana Farber Cancer Institute
44 Binney Street, D1234
Boston, MA 02115
Contact: (617) 632-3468
E-mail: arthur_skarin@dfci.harvard.edu

Dr. Skarin is an Associate Physician at Dana Farber Cancer Institute and an Associate Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School.

Dr. David J. Sugarbaker
Brigham & Women’s Hospital
Division of Thoracic Surgery
75 Francis Street
Boston, MA 02115
Contact: (617) 732-6824

An oncologist and thoracic surgeon, Dr. Sugarbaker is Chief of the Division of Thoracic Surgery at Brigham & Women’s Hospital. Dr. Sugarbaker is also the Chief of Surgical Services at the Dana Farber Cancer Institute, and an Associate Professor of Surgery at Harvard Medical School. His Tri-Modal Therapy has met with much success, and is described in more detail in the Articles and Resources section.


Michigan

Dr. Harvey Pass
Harper University Hospital
Wayne State University
3990 John Road, Suite 2102
Detroit, MI 48201
Contact: (313) 745-8746

Dr. Pass is Chief of Thoracic Oncology and the Thoracic Oncology Program Leader at Karmanos Cancer Institute; Chief of Thoracic Surgery at Detroit VA Hospital, and a Professor of Surgery and Oncology at Wayne State University. His Photo-Dynamic therapy is an aggressive new treatment for malignant mesothelioma.


Nebraska

Dr. Brian Loggie
Creighton University Medical Center
Division of Surgical Oncology, Suite 3700
601 North 30th Street
Omaha, NE 68131
Contact: (402) 280-5009

Dr. Loggie is Chief of Surgical Oncology and Director of the Cancer Center at Creighton University Medical Center, as well as a Professor of Surgery at Creighton University Medical School. He specializes in treating peritoneal mesothelioma.


New Mexico

Dr. Claire F. Verschraegen
University of New Mexico
900 Camino de Salud NE
Albuquerque, NM 87131
Contact: (505) 272-5837
E-mail: cverschraegen@salud.unm.edu

Dr. Verschraegen is an oncologist and the Director of Experimental Therapeutics at the University of New Mexico. She is an expert in the treatment of peritoneal mesothelioma.


New York

Dr. Valerie W. Rusch
Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
1275 York Ave
New York, NY 10021
Contact: (212) 639-5873

Dr. Rusch is the Chief of Thoracic Service at Sloan Kettering Memorial Cancer Center. She specializes in the treatment of pleural mesothelioma. Her work is primarily focused on pleural decortication to extrapleural pneumonectomy.

Dr. Mary Louise L. Keohan
161 Fort Washington Ave., Suite 910
New York, NY 10032
Contact: 212-305-0592 or 212-326-5511

Dr. Mary Louise Keohan is an oncologist specializing in the treatment of mesothelioma and sarcoma at the Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center. She is conducting multimodality studies of patients with pleural and peritoneal mesothelioma and other connective tissue oncology studies. The Center is located at the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons.

Dr. Roman Perez-Soler
New York University
Kaplan Cancer Center
New York, NY 10019
Contact: (212) 263-8043

Dr. Perez-Soler heads up the Phase II L-NDDP as well as the Platar trial for pleural mesothelioma.

Dr. Robert Taub
161 Fort Washington Avenue
Herbert Irving 9-907
New York, NY 10032
Contact: (212) 305-6921

Dr. Taub practices in New York City, and offers a Tri-Modal therapy for treatment of malignant mesothelioma.


North Carolina

Dr. David H. Harpole, Jr.
DUMC Box 3617
3582 Duke Hospital South
Durham, NC 27710
Contact: (919) 668-8413
E-mail: harpo002@mc.duke.edu

Dr. Harpole is an Associate Professor of Surgery at Duke University Medical Center and Chief of Cardiothoracic Surgery at Durham VAMC.


Ohio

Dr. David Mason
The Cleveland Clinic
9500 Euclid Avenue
Cleveland, OH 44195
Phone: (216) 444-4053
9500 Euclid Avenue

Dr. Mason is an Associate Staff member of the Cleveland Clinic with special interests in general thoracic surgery; minimally invasive thoracoscopic and laparaoscopic surgery, lung cancer, esophageal cancer, malignant mesothelioma, lung transplantation, imunosuppression


Pennsylvania

Dr. Daniel Sterman
3600 Spruce St.
Philadelphia, PA 19104
Contact: (215) 614-0984

Dr. Sterman is the Director of Interventional Pulmonary and an Assistant Professor at University of Pennsylvania Medical School. He co-authored of several informative articles on treatment and clinical trials for pleural mesothelioma.

Dr. Larry Kaiser
University of Pennsylvania
4th Floor
Philadephia, PA 19104
Contact: (215) 662-7538

Dr. Kaiser is Chair of the Department of Surgery, Director of General Thoracic Surgery, Director of the Thoracic Oncology Program & Center for Lung Cancer and Related Disorders, and a Professor at the University of Pennsylvania Medical School.


Tennesse

Dr. Spencer McCachren
Thompson Cancer Survival Center
1915 White Ave., 1st Floor
Knoxville, TN 37916
Contact: (865) 541-1720


Texas

Dr. David Rice
Department of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery
The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center
1515 Holcombe Blvd., Box 445
Houston, Texas 77030
Phone: (713) 745-4530
E-mail: drice@mdanderson.org

Dr. Rice was born and raised in Dublin, Ireland. He received his medical degree (M.B., B.Ch.) at the School of Medicine, Trinity College, the University of Dublin in 1991 and then completed his internship at St James Hospital, Dublin, Ireland in 1992. He left Ireland in 1992 to obtain his general surgery residency training at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN in 1999. During this time Dr. Rice took 18 months to complete a research fellowship in tumor immunology, examining ways of stimulating T-cells of the immune system to better fight cancer.

W. Roy Smythe, MD
Professor and Chairman Department of Surgery
The Texas A&M University System Health Science Center
Scott and White Clinic
2401 South 31st Street
Temple, Texas 76508
E-mail: wrsmythe@swmail.sw.orG

Dr. W. Roy is a thoracic surgeon and a Professor of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery. He has extensive experience with treating mesothelioma patients and is a leading researcher in the field of gene therapy.


Washington

Dr. Eric Vallieres
1959 NE Pacific Street
Seattle, WA 98195
(206) 548-4477

Dr. Vallieres is a thoracic surgeon who practices in Seattle at the University of Washington, and offers Multi-Modal therapy for treatment Medical Center of malignant mesothelioma.


Where Do I Go From Here?

After diagnosis, it is important to understand your treatment options. Your doctor or oncologist will provide you with information on the treatments that are available to you.

It is also important to know about your legal rights. If you have mesothelioma, or any other asbestos-related disease, you were most likely exposed to asbestos. Many of the manufacturers of asbestos insulation products knew for decades that asbestos was hazardous, yet made a business decision not to warn people of those hazards. As a result, you may have a right of recovery against those manufacturers, which can help defray the costs of treatment and provide compensation for your pain and suffering.

Mesothelioma Specialists

Mesothelioma Specialists

Choosing a doctor that is right for you can make all the difference in your treatment experience. Below are doctors with national and international reputations for their work with mesothelioma patients. The American Cancer Society has provided a checklist of topics to consider and questions to ask your doctor which may be helpful in choosing a doctor as your treating physician or to get a second opinion.


Alabama

Dr. Robert J. Cerfolionia
UAB Medical Center, The Kirklin Clinic
619 19th Street South
Birmingham, AL 35249
(205) 934-9999

Dr. Cerfolio is Assistant Professor at the University of Alabama Medical Center with a specialty in Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery.


California

Dr. David M. Jablons
Box 1674, UCSF
San Francisco, CA 94143-1674
Contact: (415) 885-3882
E-mail: jablonsd@surgery.ucsf.edu

Dr. Jablons is Chief of General Thoracic Surgery at the University of California, San Francisco-Mount Zion Medical Center; a Program Leader of Thoracic Oncology at the UCSF Comprehensive Cancer Center; an Associate Professor of Surgery and UCSF- Mount Zion Medical Center, and holds the ADA endowed chair in Thoracic Oncology. Dr. Jablons’ treatment and research specialties includes the treatment of pleural mesothelioma with pleurectomy/decortication.

Dr. Thierry Jahan
UCSF, Box 1705, Cancer Center 7th Fl.
San Francisco, CA 94143
Contact: (415) 353-9888
E-mail: thierry.jahan@ucsfmedctr.org

Dr. Jahan is a Clinical Assistant Professor at UCSF Medical Center and a Thoracic Cancer Specialist.

Dr. Mark Lischner
2 Medical Plaza, Suite 100
Roseville, CA 95661
Contact: (916) 786-7498

Dr. Robert Cameron
Dept. of Surgery, UCLA Medical School
Center for the Health Sciences, Rm 62-215
Box 951741
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1741
Contact: (310) 794-7333
E-mail: rcameron@surgery.medsch.ucla.edu

Dr. Cameron is the Director of Thoracic Oncology, Department of Surgery, at the UCLA Medical Center; Chief of General Thoracic Surgery at the Wadsworth Veterans Administration Hospital; and an Assistant Professor of Cardiothoracic Surgery and Surgical Oncology at UCLA. Dr. Cameron has extensive experience treating mesothelioma patients.


Connecticut

Dr. Mark Cullen
135 College Street, Rm. 366
New Haven, CT 06510
Contact: (203) 785-6434
E-mail: markcullen@yale.edu

Dr. Cullen is the Director of Yale’s Occupational and Environmental Medicine Program and a Professor of Medicine and Public Health at Yale University School of Medicine.


Washington, D.C.

Dr. Paul Sugarbaker
Sugarbaker Oncology Associates
Washington Cancer Institute CG-175
100 Irving Street, N.W
Washington, D.C. 20010
Contact: (202) 877-3908

Dr. Sugarbaker is the Director of Surgical Oncology at the Washington Cancer Institute. He specializes in treatment of peritoneal mesothelioma.


Florida

Dr. Lary Robinson
H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center & Research Institute
12902 Magnolia Drive
Tampa, FL 33612
Contact: (813) 972-8412

Dr. Robinson is the Director of Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery at H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center & Research Institute. He offers a Multi-Disciplinary method of treatment for malignant mesothelioma.


Illinois

Hedy Kindler, MD
5841 S. Maryland Ave.
MC 2115
Chicago, IL 60637
Contact: (773) 702-6149
E-mail:hkindler@medicine.bsd.uchicago.edu

Dr. Kindler is the Medical Director of GI Oncology at University of Chicago Medical Center and an Assistant Professor of Medicine at the University of Chicago.


Maryland

Dr. Stephen C. Yang
The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
601 North Caroline Street
Baltimore, Maryland 21287
Phone: (410) 614-3891
E-mail: syang@jhmi.edu

Stephen C. Yang, M.D. is Associate Professor of Surgery and Oncology at The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and an attending surgeon at both The Johns Hopkins Hospital and The Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center. Dr. Yang graduated from Duke University with a B.A. in Chemistry and received his M.D. degree from the Medical College of Virginia. He completed his general surgery residency at the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, and finished his cardiothoracic surgery fellowship at the Medical College of Virginia. He also completed a 3 year thoracic surgical oncology research fellowship at the University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center.


Massachusetts

Dr. Elizabeth Healy Baldini
Brigham & Women’s Hospital
Radiation Oncology
75 Francis Street, ASB1-L2
Boston, MA 02115
Contact: (617) 732-6313

Dr. Baldini is a thoracic surgeon at Carole M. & Philip L. Lowe Thoracic Oncology Program at Dana Farber Cancer Institute/Brigham & Women’s Hospital, and Associate Professor of Radiation Oncology at Harvard Medical School.

Dr. Jeanne M. Lukanich
Brigham & Women’s Hospital
Department of Surgery, Thoracic Surgery
75 Francis Street
Boston, MA 02115
Contact: (617) 732-5922
E-mail: jmlukanich@bics.bwh.harvard.edu

Dr. Lukanich is a thoracic surgeon and the Clinical Director of Lung Transplant Service at Brigham & Women’s Hospital, as well as an instructor in surgery at Harvard Medical School.

Dr. Arthur T. Skarin
Dana Farber Cancer Institute
44 Binney Street, D1234
Boston, MA 02115
Contact: (617) 632-3468
E-mail: arthur_skarin@dfci.harvard.edu

Dr. Skarin is an Associate Physician at Dana Farber Cancer Institute and an Associate Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School.

Dr. David J. Sugarbaker
Brigham & Women’s Hospital
Division of Thoracic Surgery
75 Francis Street
Boston, MA 02115
Contact: (617) 732-6824

An oncologist and thoracic surgeon, Dr. Sugarbaker is Chief of the Division of Thoracic Surgery at Brigham & Women’s Hospital. Dr. Sugarbaker is also the Chief of Surgical Services at the Dana Farber Cancer Institute, and an Associate Professor of Surgery at Harvard Medical School. His Tri-Modal Therapy has met with much success, and is described in more detail in the Articles and Resources section.


Michigan

Dr. Harvey Pass
Harper University Hospital
Wayne State University
3990 John Road, Suite 2102
Detroit, MI 48201
Contact: (313) 745-8746

Dr. Pass is Chief of Thoracic Oncology and the Thoracic Oncology Program Leader at Karmanos Cancer Institute; Chief of Thoracic Surgery at Detroit VA Hospital, and a Professor of Surgery and Oncology at Wayne State University. His Photo-Dynamic therapy is an aggressive new treatment for malignant mesothelioma.


Nebraska

Dr. Brian Loggie
Creighton University Medical Center
Division of Surgical Oncology, Suite 3700
601 North 30th Street
Omaha, NE 68131
Contact: (402) 280-5009

Dr. Loggie is Chief of Surgical Oncology and Director of the Cancer Center at Creighton University Medical Center, as well as a Professor of Surgery at Creighton University Medical School. He specializes in treating peritoneal mesothelioma.


New Mexico

Dr. Claire F. Verschraegen
University of New Mexico
900 Camino de Salud NE
Albuquerque, NM 87131
Contact: (505) 272-5837
E-mail: cverschraegen@salud.unm.edu

Dr. Verschraegen is an oncologist and the Director of Experimental Therapeutics at the University of New Mexico. She is an expert in the treatment of peritoneal mesothelioma.


New York

Dr. Valerie W. Rusch
Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
1275 York Ave
New York, NY 10021
Contact: (212) 639-5873

Dr. Rusch is the Chief of Thoracic Service at Sloan Kettering Memorial Cancer Center. She specializes in the treatment of pleural mesothelioma. Her work is primarily focused on pleural decortication to extrapleural pneumonectomy.

Dr. Mary Louise L. Keohan
161 Fort Washington Ave., Suite 910
New York, NY 10032
Contact: 212-305-0592 or 212-326-5511

Dr. Mary Louise Keohan is an oncologist specializing in the treatment of mesothelioma and sarcoma at the Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center. She is conducting multimodality studies of patients with pleural and peritoneal mesothelioma and other connective tissue oncology studies. The Center is located at the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons.

Dr. Roman Perez-Soler
New York University
Kaplan Cancer Center
New York, NY 10019
Contact: (212) 263-8043

Dr. Perez-Soler heads up the Phase II L-NDDP as well as the Platar trial for pleural mesothelioma.

Dr. Robert Taub
161 Fort Washington Avenue
Herbert Irving 9-907
New York, NY 10032
Contact: (212) 305-6921

Dr. Taub practices in New York City, and offers a Tri-Modal therapy for treatment of malignant mesothelioma.


North Carolina

Dr. David H. Harpole, Jr.
DUMC Box 3617
3582 Duke Hospital South
Durham, NC 27710
Contact: (919) 668-8413
E-mail: harpo002@mc.duke.edu

Dr. Harpole is an Associate Professor of Surgery at Duke University Medical Center and Chief of Cardiothoracic Surgery at Durham VAMC.


Ohio

Dr. David Mason
The Cleveland Clinic
9500 Euclid Avenue
Cleveland, OH 44195
Phone: (216) 444-4053
9500 Euclid Avenue

Dr. Mason is an Associate Staff member of the Cleveland Clinic with special interests in general thoracic surgery; minimally invasive thoracoscopic and laparaoscopic surgery, lung cancer, esophageal cancer, malignant mesothelioma, lung transplantation, imunosuppression


Pennsylvania

Dr. Daniel Sterman
3600 Spruce St.
Philadelphia, PA 19104
Contact: (215) 614-0984

Dr. Sterman is the Director of Interventional Pulmonary and an Assistant Professor at University of Pennsylvania Medical School. He co-authored of several informative articles on treatment and clinical trials for pleural mesothelioma.

Dr. Larry Kaiser
University of Pennsylvania
4th Floor
Philadephia, PA 19104
Contact: (215) 662-7538

Dr. Kaiser is Chair of the Department of Surgery, Director of General Thoracic Surgery, Director of the Thoracic Oncology Program & Center for Lung Cancer and Related Disorders, and a Professor at the University of Pennsylvania Medical School.


Tennesse

Dr. Spencer McCachren
Thompson Cancer Survival Center
1915 White Ave., 1st Floor
Knoxville, TN 37916
Contact: (865) 541-1720


Texas

Dr. David Rice
Department of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery
The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center
1515 Holcombe Blvd., Box 445
Houston, Texas 77030
Phone: (713) 745-4530
E-mail: drice@mdanderson.org

Dr. Rice was born and raised in Dublin, Ireland. He received his medical degree (M.B., B.Ch.) at the School of Medicine, Trinity College, the University of Dublin in 1991 and then completed his internship at St James Hospital, Dublin, Ireland in 1992. He left Ireland in 1992 to obtain his general surgery residency training at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN in 1999. During this time Dr. Rice took 18 months to complete a research fellowship in tumor immunology, examining ways of stimulating T-cells of the immune system to better fight cancer.

W. Roy Smythe, MD
Professor and Chairman Department of Surgery
The Texas A&M University System Health Science Center
Scott and White Clinic
2401 South 31st Street
Temple, Texas 76508
E-mail: wrsmythe@swmail.sw.orG

Dr. W. Roy is a thoracic surgeon and a Professor of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery. He has extensive experience with treating mesothelioma patients and is a leading researcher in the field of gene therapy.


Washington

Dr. Eric Vallieres
1959 NE Pacific Street
Seattle, WA 98195
(206) 548-4477

Dr. Vallieres is a thoracic surgeon who practices in Seattle at the University of Washington, and offers Multi-Modal therapy for treatment Medical Center of malignant mesothelioma.


Where Do I Go From Here?

After diagnosis, it is important to understand your treatment options. Your doctor or oncologist will provide you with information on the treatments that are available to you.

It is also important to know about your legal rights. If you have mesothelioma, or any other asbestos-related disease, you were most likely exposed to asbestos. Many of the manufacturers of asbestos insulation products knew for decades that asbestos was hazardous, yet made a business decision not to warn people of those hazards. As a result, you may have a right of recovery against those manufacturers, which can help defray the costs of treatment and provide compensation for your pain and suffering.

Thursday, September 24, 2009

An Overview on Adsense Program

Adsense is the best cost-per-click (CPC) program offered by the mighty Google. Many Webmasters earn their primary source of income over the Internet through Google’s Adsense. Although it is possible to earn several hundreds to thousands of dollars in a month, many struggle to make even a meager sum of amount.

If you have a better understanding about the Adsense program, you can make a good living through it. You can also maximize your site’s earning by integrating other sources of revenue like the Affiliate programs. But you need to understand that according to the Adsense’s policy, you can’t display advertisements that are similar to the one provided by them (Adsense).

Content really matters

As widely said “Content is the King”, applies to Adsense as well. Adsense is such a program which displays relevant advertisements that are based on your keywords. For instance if your site is related to “Stock Markets”, the advertisements served would be related to Stock Markets. When you write content targeting Adsense, make sure the usage of words are related to the topic. Sometimes it is weird to note that one single word in your article (content) can influence the ad-serving technology which may be totally irrelevant to your site’s theme. In such cases you need to identify the specific word and try to replace it.

High paying Keywords

You may find information floating over the Internet related to high paying Adsense keywords. These are set of keywords which offer high rate of earnings per click. The competition is very high for such keywords and it may be difficult to rank well in Search Engines. Moreover such keywords may not offer the same amount of cost per click for all. The cost per click depends on various factors which include the location of the visitor or the person who clicks the ad, specific ad, keyword competition at that particular period of time etc. It is better to use Adsense on sites that you have already created rather than creating sites just for the sake of earning through Adsense.

Optimizing your Ads

Once you got enough earnings through the Adsense program, it is the time to increase your revenue which could be done by optimizing your Advertisements. This is really based on case to case basis. Some ad formats may work well for others but not for your site. It is a good news for a newbie to know that Adsense program offers different format of ads. You can create the ad format/ type based on your preference from your Adsense account. The program offers textual ads, banner ads and video ads. To cut down the list further, it also offers horizontal, vertical or search box ads.

Policy Compliance

As an Adsense publisher, you need to comply with the Terms and Conditions of the program set from time to time. A complete reference can be found at Adsense.com. Non-compliance to the policy may lead to banning of your Account. Some of the important terms are mentioned hereunder:

a) You should not ask the visitor to click on the ads

b) You should not display ads on copyright materials, on which you don’t have the permission.

c) Adsense ad cannot be used on Racial, gambling or pornographic content

d) You need to display a privacy policy in your website as per the program’s requirement.

Free Website Promotion

Free Website Promotion…Why Not?

Can you ever avail of free website promotion? Is that even feasible?

Of course yes! Nowadays, your baby website can amass huge traffic in no time thanks to free website promotion.

How does this free website promotion go anyway? What are things to be done?

1. Enlist your website.

Look for the hottest Internet directories and enlist your site there. This is the easiest and most effective free website promotion tactic. Start with this step and the rest of the good things will follow.

Just don’t forget to prep your website and make it all spruced up for a higher chance to get accepted in your directory of choice.

2. Know your forums.

One reason why forums are created is for free website promotion for everyone. Log in, post actively, let them know about your site in every post and you attract instant visitors right there.

3. Write a press release.

Release your writing prowess and start up a press release that advertises your site! This is a free website promotion tactic that you can do anytime. Type a brief paragraph or two and email it to your friends, colleagues, internet e-zines, newspapers and other media and massive traffic will come to you pronto!

4. Be friendly online.

Free website promotion means you need to be friendly to other webmasters. Why, you ask? So they can link you immediately! Establish contacts and never tire of link requests and exchanges.

5. Write an article.

Say, your website is about your travel agency. Write an article about the perks of traveling or the hottest travel spots in the world. On the concluding paragraph, mention your website in passing. This article works as an advertorial and doubles as a free website promotion approach.

6. Just let the whole world know about your site.

What is free website promotion without the word of mouth? Insert your website, its URL and features in daily conversations and let the good news spread from one mouth to another!

7. Make a banner ad.

Make a banner ad for your site and ask another webmaster to do the same for his site. Then swap!

8. Take up a free website promotion course online.

Yes, there are free website promotion tutorials. But don’t you know that you can actually take a free website promotion course that can help you out further? Part of the free website promotion program is signing up for newsletters.

When you make a website, you need not pay anything to promote it. You just read it — there is such a thing as free website promotion!

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Mesothelioma Symptoms

Mesothelioma Symptoms

Symptoms of plueral mesothelioma (lining of the chest cavity) include:

  • Cough
  • Difficulty sleeping
  • Fever
  • Pain at the side of the chest or the lower back
  • Pleural effusions (fluid in the chest cavity)
  • Progressive loss of appetite and weight loss
  • Shortness of breath, difficulty breathing
  • Tireness
  • Trouble swallowing

Symptoms of peritoneal mesothelioma (lining of the abdominal cavity) include:

  • Belly Pain
  • Nausea
  • Vomiting
  • Weight loss

If there is reason to suspect you might have mesothelioma, or some other ailment, the doctor will take your medical history and often do a complete physical exam. The exam can help tell if you have fluid in the chest, abdomen, or heart area. This fluid can be a sign of mesothelioma. Then one or more of the methods below can be utilize to determine out if you actually have cancer.

Imaging tests allow the doctor to see a picture of the area in question. These could include x-rays, CT scans (computed tomography), MRI (magnetic resonance imaging), or PET scans.

Fluid or tissue samples may be taken (from the chest, stomach, or heart area) with a needle and sent to the lab to see if cancer cells are present.

Other methods involve making a small cut (incision) in the chest or stomach area and then using a small tube with a video camera to allow the doctor to look directly at the area in question.

In another approach, the doctor can insert a lighted tube through the mouth and into the chest. This is called a bronchoscopy (bron-KOS-kuh-pee). If the tube is placed under the chest bone and then moved down into the chest, it is called a mediastinoscopy (media-stine-AHS-kuh-pee).

Surgery allows the doctor to remove a larger sample of tumor or, sometimes, the whole tumor.

It is often hard to identify mesothelioma by looking only at the cells from the fluid around the lungs, stomach, or heart. So your doctor may want to do other tests as well. Sometimes an electron microscope is used to look at cells in greater detail.

Sunday, August 30, 2009

Mesothelioma Information Resource providing information on asbestos

Mesothelioma Information Resource providing information on asbestos related injuries and treatments to patients, families and loved ones.


It is the aim of MIRG to provide information about mesothelioma, its causes, its treatment and its personal and legal impact.

Mesothelioma, an agressive form of lung cancer resulting from exposure to asbestos consists of two general types, pleural mesothelioma and peritoneal mesothelioma.

Mesothelioma is closely linked to exposure to asbestos. Around 2,000 to 3,000 people are diagnosed with mesothelioma in the United States every year. Malignant mesothelioma is more common in older male adults; even though a mesothelioma diagnosis can come at any age, most people with mesothelioma cancer are 65 and older.

This web site has focused on mesothelioma. Not every asbestos-related lung cancer, however, is a mesothelioma. Other thoracic carcinomas, such as adenocarcinoma, are also known to be caused by exposure to asbestos. Click following link for Asbestos Related Lung Cancer.

You will find the Mesothelioma News section current and covering a full range of topics. A mesothelioma diagnosis is overwhelming, and we are here to help you find the options that are best suited to your individual needs.

Treatment for mesothelioma depends on the location of the cancer, the stage of the disease, and the patient's age and general health. Standard mesothelioma treatment options include surgery, radiation therapy, and chemotherapy. Sometimes, treatment options are combined.

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