
- With Mayo Clinic oncologist
Edward T. Creagan, M.D.
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Edward T. Creagan, M.D.
Edward T. Creagan, M.D.
"The magic of the electronic village is transforming health information. The mouse and keyboard have extended the stethoscope to the 500 million people now online." - Dr. Edward Creagan
The power of the medium inspires Dr. Edward Creagan as he searches for ways to share Mayo Clinic's vast resources with the general public.
Dr. Creagan, a Newark, N.J., native, is board certified in internal medicine, medical oncology, and hospice medicine and palliative care. He has been with Mayo Clinic since 1973 and in 1999 was president of the staff of Mayo Clinic. Dr. Creagan, a professor of medical oncology at Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, was honored in 1995 with the John and Roma Rouse Professor of Humanism in Medicine Award and in 1992 with the Distinguished Mayo Clinician Award, Mayo's highest recognition. He has been recognized with the American Cancer Society Professorship of Clinical Oncology.
He describes his areas of special interest as "wellness as a bio-psycho-social-spiritual-financial model" and fitness, mind-body connection, aging and burnout.
Dr. Creagan has been an associate medical editor with Mayo Clinic's Web sites and has edited publications and CD-ROMs and reviewed articles.
"We the team of (the Web site) provide reliable, easy-to-understand health and wellness information so that each of us can have productive, meaningful lives," he says.
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Nov. 11, 2008
Push the envelope at your own peril
By Edward T. Creagan, M.D.
Every once in a while, a medical article confirms what many of us intuitively know. We need rest. We need time for introspection. We need time to be "silent." Please read on.
Spiritual belief systems of the Eastern and Western traditions have underscored the importance of a day of rest which is typically referred to as the sabbath. There is now compelling evidence why this is important.
A recent scientific study from physicians in Sweden clearly documented over a 20-year period that the number of heart attacks dramatically decreased on the Monday after clocks were set back an hour. On the other hand, there were more heart attacks during the week after the start of standard time, especially during the first three days of the week.
The researchers have speculated that sleep has a beneficial effect on the heart and certainly on the soul, and if we continue to "push the envelope," we do so at our own peril. Do you have any tips you can share about how you can get enough sleep, or why it's difficult to do just that?
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