And I agree with her...MOST ESPECIALLY those of you who have education/experience in the areas we need.
I'm kind of ancient and went to Catholic schools in the 1950s, so vocab, word roots, a little bit of Latin were all part of my daily routine...but not science. Catholic schools in the 1950s were not really big on science...especially for girls. Unless they wanted be nurses and then there was a kind of indentured servant program for nurses in big cities...it was called Diploma Nurse training for RNs. But as you kind of figured by now, I'm not the indentured servant type. ERGO...(see? I know the Latin) I know that water seeks its own level and that if you get everyone at your lab table to mix their zinc and magnesium into one biggish pile in the HS lab and hit it with a Bunsen burner, you make the room and windows shake. And you get suspended from lab work. I think that's it. Everything else is based on life experience...mine and my mom's and then on TRYING to understand the journals.
Reading the medical stuff is a HUGE challenge and I generally think I deserve an award for making it through the abstracts.
So...what Barb said.