Testing Times

B. Kelly
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Abstract

Editorial Testing Times As I write, the inquests have begun. Two natural phenomena, one very large and one very small, have exercised our minds, and our economies, recently. The larger, a volcano under Iceland's Eyjafjallajoekull glacier, comprehensively grounded Europe's commercial airlines, causing chaos and stranding registered voters everywhere. The second was a microscopic villain. The influenza virus H1N1 (Swine Flu) surfaced in the United States, twirled its pantomime moustache menacingly, and ignited the 2009 pandemic. Governments immediately raced to stockpile supplies of vaccine and Tamiflu. In both cases, the question now being asked is whether the official response was over zealous. Many lives were lost to that influenza virus, but none to volcanic ash in jet engines. So far. For both events, however, the outcome might have been very different. Begging Wordsworth's indulgence, our retrospection is, I would contend, drama, recollected in tranquility. Conall McCaughey's superb and timely review considers the biology of that influenza virus. Using it as a template, he expounds on viral structure, its ubiquity and abundance, mechanisms of replication and dissemination, and how anti viral therapies work. Mature readers will recall diligently writing serial essays, confident in the knowledge that each would be marked with forensic fairness, by dedicated, selfless examiners who, with luck, would overlook minor obfuscations, and score hosanna's to their worthy prose. In the tick of a cosmic clock, those same readers would find themselves marking interminable essays; wading though cryptographic handwriting to unearth the morass of random half-learned facts that lay concealed, or perhaps, congealed, beneath. As an assessment tool, the essay is now a thing of the past, in medicine at least, and the multiple-choice question is looking like an endangered species too. In the second of this edition's reviews, Paul McCoubrie considers the assessment process, why it remains essential, and in an encyclopedic exposition, demonstrates just how far we have moved away from foolscap and writer's cramp. Professor Brew Atkinson's presidential Ulster Medical Society address is also within these pages. Professor Atkinson's masterly article details our understanding of the pituitary gland, from Ancient Egypt, via David and Goliath, to our current genetic understanding of pituitary-related diseases. My thanks, as ever, for all your papers. Please keep them coming. May I finally take this opportunity to wish you and yours a wonderful summer.
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在我写这篇文章的时候,调查已经开始了。两个自然现象,一个很大,一个很小,最近一直在考验我们的思维和经济。较大的一次是冰岛Eyjafjallajoekull冰川下的一座火山,导致欧洲的商业航空公司全面停飞,造成混乱,并使各地的登记选民陷入困境。第二个是显微镜下的恶棍。流感病毒H1N1(猪流感)在美国浮出水面,威胁地扭动着它的哑剧小胡子,并点燃了2009年的大流行。各国政府立即迅速储备疫苗和达菲。在这两种情况下,现在要问的问题是,官方的回应是否过于热情。许多人死于流感病毒,但没有人死于喷气发动机中的火山灰。到目前为止。然而,这两件事的结果可能截然不同。请华兹华斯原谅,我认为,我们的回顾是在宁静中回忆起来的戏剧。康纳尔·麦卡希(Conall McCaughey)出色而及时的回顾了流感病毒的生物学特性。以它为模板,他阐述了病毒的结构,它的普遍性和丰度,复制和传播机制,以及抗病毒治疗如何起作用。成熟的读者会回忆起自己勤勤恳恳地写系列文章,相信每一篇文章都会被无私奉献的审查员公正地批阅,如果运气好的话,审查员会忽略一些小的困惑,给他们有价值的文章打分。在宇宙时钟的滴答声中,这些读者会发现自己在批注没完没了的文章;费力地从密码学的笔迹中挖掘出隐藏在下面的、或者可能是凝固的、随机的、半信半解的事实。作为一种评估工具,作文现在已经成为过去,至少在医学领域是这样,而选择题看起来也像一个濒临灭绝的物种。在本期评论的第二部分,保罗·麦考布里(Paul McCoubrie)思考了评估过程,为什么它仍然是必不可少的,并以百科全书式的阐述,展示了我们离傻瓜和作家抽筋有多远。布鲁·阿特金森教授的阿尔斯特医学协会主席地址也在这些页面中。阿特金森教授精湛的文章详细介绍了我们对脑垂体的理解,从古埃及,通过大卫和歌利亚,到我们目前对脑垂体相关疾病的遗传理解。我一如既往地感谢你所有的论文。请让他们继续来。最后,请允许我借此机会祝你和你的家人有一个愉快的夏天。
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