
Friday, May 30, 2008
Shop Till You Drop!

Thursday, May 22, 2008
Post Conference Fun


Friday, May 16, 2008
What is Tango?


Tango. The origins are debated, but it's influence is on the world's dance scene is not! It is a unique style of music, not unlike a mix between a waltz and polka. In the 19th century, it was associated with the bordello, and was a favorite in Argentina among poorer laborers and immigrants. The first piece of music written and published in Argentina describing itself as a tango appeared in 1857. It was called "Toma maté, ché" ("Drink maté tea, dude"). The tango spread across the pond in the earliest 20th century, to become refined. It probably came into France first through the port of Marseille, where Argentine sailors would dance with the local girls, and tango was the couple dance they preferred. There is evidence of a couple dancing tango on stage in Monmartre (then a "seedy" part of Paris) by 1909. But it was in 1912 that the tango took Paris by storm.
By this time Argentina was the seventh richest country in the world, with an average per capita income four times that of Spain or Italy. While the poor stayed poor, the rich got very rich indeed, and it became the fashion for families to send their young sons to Europe, either to go to university, or simply to do the Grand Tour and finish off their education.
So who's the guy in the hat? Not Desi Arnaz of "I Love Lucy!" No, it is Carlos Gardel, who bacame tango's superstar in the 1920's. His distinctive voice and vibrant personality was noted in Hollywood, but his untimely death in a Columbian plane crash in 1935 afforded him mythical status.
Tango was pretty much banned after the overthrow of Peron in 1955, ushering in Argentina's "dark age," lasting until the Falklands war of 1983. The military junta outlawed Argentina's national symbol. With the downfall of the military government, Argentines renewed their pride on being Argentines, and the tango was reborn. The classical ballroom tango (tango de salon) was retaught by the old masters, and a faster, and perhaps more seductive form, the milonga tango, also became popular.
To a "gringo," the tango looks intimidating. It is a complicated series of steps where the man seems to do 90% of the work. Nevertheless, I never felt belittled in my struggle to learn it in Buenos Aires. Many portenos (those of Buenos Aires) encouraged me along. I then danced along with the pros of the "Confiteria Ideal," a signature ballroom in the heart of Buenos Aires. People routinely tango in the streets of La Boca (see picture), and Palermo, especially on a Saturday afternoon, where young and old alike dance. Tango bed and breakfasts abound in the capital. And it has made a resurgence in Paris, where one can dance Sunday night along the left bank of the Seine.
Take advantage of some of our outings during the Second Interamerican Congress of Emergency Medicine to experience for yourself the legend of tango. For the more adventurous, classes abound in Buenos Aires, and we can set you up with a tango B and B if you like. You may contact us at worlddoc@comcast.net for more info.
Wednesday, May 7, 2008
Conference Spotlight: Joe Lex MD, FACEP, FAAEM
Dr. Joe Lex, FACEP, FAAEM, has been involved in Emergency Medicine for more than 40 years, initially as an Army medic with the 25th Infantry "Tropic Lightning" Division in
The AAEM honored him by renaming the Educator of the Year award the "Joe Lex Award." He has been an invited speaker at more than 250 conferences regionally, nationally, and internationally. He has been a featured speaker numerous times on Audio-Digest Emergency Medicine, Practical Reviews in Emergency Medicine, and Emergency Medicine Reviews and Perspectives (EMRAP). He is a member of Emergency Medicine organizations on four continents, and was made an honorary member of the Sociedad Argentina de Emergencias in 2005.
Saturday, May 3, 2008
Conference Spotlight: Darryl Macias MD, FACEP

Along with my Argentine counterpart, Alberto Machado, I have helped with organizing the scientific program for the Second Interamerican Conference on Emergency Medicine. As a boarded emergency medicine specialist, I have been based at the emergency department at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, and in many international venues. Education my passion, and my belief of bringing emergency medical education has been tested in India and Nepal, where I have put on CME courses for local physicians. I have also worked with residents and medical students at the Sihanouk Center of Hope in Cambodia. But my passion for Latin America was sparked with my involvement in PACEMD (www.pacemd.org) as co-founder, teaching emergency medicine in Mexico. My other passion, ultrasound, became the first emergency ultrasound course, disseminated not only throughout Mexico, but also in Panama, Argentina, and Ecuador. I also created an international high altitude and disaster course in Ecuador.
I am the ACEP ambassador to Argentina and France. Both countries are in a transition between the Anglo-American, and the Continental European model of emergency care. I have been fortunate enough to live in both places, and to experience how our colleagues live in these countries. That is why I am committed to making this conference a success! With all the global attention going to China these days, Argentina is an undiscovered gem. With its growing economy, it will also be the spotlight for our 4th International High Altitude Medicine Congress, on the flanks of Aconcagua, in January 2010.
Take advantage of the Second Interamerican Conference, not only for the education, but also for the experience of a lifetime!