Dr Helen Williams

44 Followers
24 Following
24 Posts
A medical scientist and mum of three. My main research interests are cardiovascular disease and wound healing. I like to eat chocolate and bake things.

"'Do you see the puckering around this white mass?' The radiologist pointed to a white blur on the monochrome scan. To my untrained eye, it resembled a comet throwing out plumes of dust in the blackness of space. 'That’s a tell-tale sign.'

I had just turned 40, and until this point I had never even had a mammogram. Now I was being told I had breast cancer."

My article in the @wsj about historical treatments of #breastcancer, and my own experience with the disease.

https://www.wsj.com/articles/a-medical-historian-confronts-breast-cancer-11669917623?st=47w2guxbp6b1rtf&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink&ns=prod/accounts-wsj

A Medical Historian Confronts Breast Cancer

After her diagnosis, a writer reflects on how the pain and suffering of generations of women helped lead to today’s medical advances.

The Wall Street Journal
I feel like we should have a service where a whole gaggle of trans women pick up newly out folks and take them for a whole day of shopping and we just take over every store and stare daggers at anyone being weird.
Market success! I had pain au chocolat , smoked salmon, and weisswurst for breakfast. Then grabbed some chocolate and cheese for later.
I've been photographing the night sky with my Pixel 6 Pro trying to find an eerie space where the ground and the sky meet...
Here are a few from last night.
I sat by an election denier on the airplane and he started poking me in the arm to be emphatic about his views on people stealing ballots secretly and the airplane was full and I couldn’t move anywhere so I started explaining the yellow fever in very great detail, all the way down to telling him about the bloody vomit that looks like coffee grounds and it worked. He stopped talking to me. The moral of this story is you can’t out-weird an academic; our toolset is too vast. #vastearlyamerica
In Melbourne for a conference. Had a lovely morning walk (even if we didn't realise the markets were closed today until we got there).

Me, writing work emails after reading #JaneAusten:

“My dear Dr. Dashwood—
I trust that you and your graduate students remain in good health. Praise for your latest article is on everyone’s lips. I have not the smallest wish to vex you, but circumstances compel me to trouble you for a meeting. There is not a moment to be lost. I flatter myself that you will endeavour to fill out this Whenisgood poll before Michaelmas.
Until then I remain,
Your humble servant— S.” 🪶

Hello there! I’m Associate Professor Cameron Webb, Medical Entomologist (aka “mosquito wrangler”) with NSW Health Pathology and University of Sydney in Australia. I’m interested in keeping you and your family safe from the pest and public health threats of mosquitoes. Follow me to learn more about mosquitoes and the #wetlands where I do much of my work. You can read more about mosquitoes in the articles I’ve published through The Conversation https://theconversation.com/profiles/cameron-webb-6736 #introduction #scicomm #entomology #publichealth #science #mosquitoes
Cameron Webb

Cameron Webb — Profile on The Conversation

The Conversation

Finding my phone is more of a challenge than it used to be. I have to check where I would have put it (table? sofa? handbag?). Then if no luck I have to extend the search to where my kids would have moved it (floor? under sofa?). Then I check where partner might have moved it (high places?). Victory is mine, though.

Just call it, you say? Yeah... That would have worked if 1) I didn't keep it on vibrate only and 2) Partner had not been vacuuming.

#Parenting

“Nothing will be more beneficial to the academic life science enterprise than getting some real competition…I see this as immensely healthy.”
https://www.statnews.com/2022/11/10/tipping-point-is-coming-unprecedented-exodus-of-young-life-scientists-shaking-up-academia/
‘The tipping point is coming’: Unprecedented exodus of young life scientists is shaking up academia

Faculty are struggling to hire postdocs, delaying research projects and pressuring universities to consider improving salaries and benefits as endowments are shrinking.

STAT