Thursday, April 12, 2012

Doctors cook

  • SOME people cannot travel without Advil or a neck pillow. Dr. David M.
  • (New York Times)
  • Gill reportedly told his patients he was a doctor in the British Army when in actuality he had only served as a cook and had no medical training or experience.
  • (NJ.com)
  • A recent NY Times article, To Heal, First Eat, talks about the value of teaching doctors how to cook so that they can in turn teach their patients the benefits of eating nutritious food.
  • (Examiner)
  • Another is the peace and solitude, most evident at dusk. House of Pitkin at 78900 Rancho La Quinta Drive. Marcia is a superb cook, both creatively and technically, and I like to dabble in the kitchen.
  • (Desert Sun)
  • To Dr. David M. Eisenberg, an associate professor at the Harvard Medical School and the Harvard School of Public Health, flavor is a health issue. Thats why he has started teaching doctors how to cook.
  • (Eureka! Science News)
  • William Cook was just 18 years old, when he stepped on an IED while he was deployed in Iraq. Now 22, he lost part of his left leg, damaged nerves and tendons in his right leg and lost tissue in one arm.
  • (First Coast News)
  • Cook, now 22, lost part of his left leg, damaged nerves and tendons in his right leg and lost tissue in one arm. Doctors patched him up and gave him a prosthetic. But he still didnt feel quite right.
  • (9News)
  • And over the years she has taught him to cook. I love cooking and Im passionate about organic food. Being a doctor is not easy, so I need to eat healthy food, he says.
  • (Bangkok Post)
  • The nonpartisan Cook Political Report estimates that about two dozen Dan Benishek, a former small-town doctor from Michigan, as a major disappointment since he was elected to the House in 2010.
  • (Huffington Post)

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