Pages

Friday, August 10, 2012

About 290,000 more Kentuckians would be eligible for Medicaid if state expands program, Urban Institute study finds

About 289,000 more people in Kentucky would be able to get health insurance if the state opts to expand its Medicaid program up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level, as authorized by federal health-care reform, a new report from the Urban Institute has found. Just how many more Kentuckians would be affected by the possible expansion had previously been uncertain, with varying estimates.

Of those eligible, 56,000 are parents and 232,000 are adults who don't have dependent children, the report found. Those who are between the ages of 35 and 54 have the most to gain in the state, with 78,000 newly eligible Kentuckians falling into that age bracket. The report, funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, says about 15 million more people nationwide could get health insurance under Medicaid expansion.

Gov. Steve Beshear has said he will expend the program if the state can afford it, and is studying how much it would cost. The federal government will pay all the costs for the new eligibles at the through 2016, but by 2020, states will be responsible for 10 percent of those costs. For current eligibles, the state pays and would continue to pay about 30 percent.

Though much of the discussion on expansion is based on whether states can afford it, "Exclusively monetary calculations ignore the potential human, financial and productivity benefits associated with improved access to affordable health care for the millions of low-income adults who lack health insurance coverage and their families," the study's authors conclude. (Read more)

About 289,000 more people in Kentucky would be able to get health insurance if the state opts to expand its Medicaid program up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level, as authorized by federal health-care reform, a new report from the Urban Institute has found. Just how many more Kentuckians would be affected by the possible expansion had previously been uncertain, with varying estimates.

Of those eligible, 56,000 are parents and 232,000 are adults who don't have dependent children, the report found. Those who are between the ages of 35 and 54 have the most to gain in the state, with 78,000 newly eligible Kentuckians falling into that age bracket. The report, funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, says about 15 million more people nationwide could get health insurance under Medicaid expansion.

Gov. Steve Beshear has said he will expend the program if the state can afford it, and is studying how much it would cost. The federal government will pay all the costs for the new eligibles at the through 2016, but by 2020, states will be responsible for 10 percent of those costs. For current eligibles, the state pays and would continue to pay about 30 percent.

Though much of the discussion on expansion is based on whether states can afford it, "Exclusively monetary calculations ignore the potential human, financial and productivity benefits associated with improved access to affordable health care for the millions of low-income adults who lack health insurance coverage and their families," the study's authors conclude. (Read more)

Read More


Papa John's CEO says new health law will raise price of pizza by 11 to 14 cents; Courier-Journal says that's worth it

Papa John's found and CEO John Schnatter.
Courier-Journal photo
Papa John's CEO John Schnatter did more than put the Affordable Care Act under the microscope this week, he threw it in a hot oven, saying the law will increase the price of a pizza by 11 to 14 cents. But an editorial in The Courier-Journal argues all Schatter did was prove the law's value. 

"That's a bargain if it means thousands of Papa John's employees in all 50 states are going to be getting health coverage and we're not going to have to foot the bill when hardworking but uninsured pizza chefs get ill and end up in the hospital," the editorial reads.

Schnatter's comments drew national attention and were the focus of stories by 60 media outlets, reports Chris Otts for The Courier-Journal. They were also the brunt of the joke in a segment on Comedy Central's "The Colbert Report." "Fourteen cents," said host Stephen Colbert. "That's three times the value of a Papa John's pizza."

Schnatter's comments were answers to questions from a stock analyst about the cost of health care for the company. "We're not supportive of Obamacare, like most businesses in our industry," he said. "But our business model and unit economics are about as ideal as you can get for a food company to absorb Obamacare."

The law "requires that businesses with 50 or more full-time-equivalent employees offer health benefits to those employees and their dependents or face penalties," Otts reports. The law could mean Louisville-based Papa John's International and its franchises will have to provide health care coverage to its employees, most of whom work part time. About 14,400 of Papa John's 16,500 employees work in company-owned stores. (Read more)
Papa John's found and CEO John Schnatter.
Courier-Journal photo
Papa John's CEO John Schnatter did more than put the Affordable Care Act under the microscope this week, he threw it in a hot oven, saying the law will increase the price of a pizza by 11 to 14 cents. But an editorial in The Courier-Journal argues all Schatter did was prove the law's value. 

"That's a bargain if it means thousands of Papa John's employees in all 50 states are going to be getting health coverage and we're not going to have to foot the bill when hardworking but uninsured pizza chefs get ill and end up in the hospital," the editorial reads.

Schnatter's comments drew national attention and were the focus of stories by 60 media outlets, reports Chris Otts for The Courier-Journal. They were also the brunt of the joke in a segment on Comedy Central's "The Colbert Report." "Fourteen cents," said host Stephen Colbert. "That's three times the value of a Papa John's pizza."

Schnatter's comments were answers to questions from a stock analyst about the cost of health care for the company. "We're not supportive of Obamacare, like most businesses in our industry," he said. "But our business model and unit economics are about as ideal as you can get for a food company to absorb Obamacare."

The law "requires that businesses with 50 or more full-time-equivalent employees offer health benefits to those employees and their dependents or face penalties," Otts reports. The law could mean Louisville-based Papa John's International and its franchises will have to provide health care coverage to its employees, most of whom work part time. About 14,400 of Papa John's 16,500 employees work in company-owned stores. (Read more)
Read More


Kentucky rated worst in country for power-plant pollution

Kentucky was ranked first in the country for the amount of pollution from power plants in 2009 and 2010, a study by the Natural Resources Defense Council found.

The Paradise Fossil Plant in Muhlenberg County, left, run by the Tennessee Valley Authority, was ranked the nation's top power-plant polluter in 2010. American Electric Power's Big Sandy plant in Lawrence County was ranked fifth, and the Mill Creek station of Louisville Gas & Electric was seventh.

The NRDC's initial report showed a huge increase in Kentucky power-plant emissions from 2009 to 2010, but after The Courier-Journal raised questions about it, the report was corrected. The corrected figures showed that the state remained No. 1 in power-plant pollution. (Read more)

Kentucky was ranked first in the country for the amount of pollution from power plants in 2009 and 2010, a study by the Natural Resources Defense Council found.

The Paradise Fossil Plant in Muhlenberg County, left, run by the Tennessee Valley Authority, was ranked the nation's top power-plant polluter in 2010. American Electric Power's Big Sandy plant in Lawrence County was ranked fifth, and the Mill Creek station of Louisville Gas & Electric was seventh.

The NRDC's initial report showed a huge increase in Kentucky power-plant emissions from 2009 to 2010, but after The Courier-Journal raised questions about it, the report was corrected. The corrected figures showed that the state remained No. 1 in power-plant pollution. (Read more)

Read More


Searching for a fundamental 'particle' of mental health

The discovery of the Higgs particle, which gives matter its mass, was a huge breakthrough for scientists since "confirming its existence was imperative to a full scientific understanding of the world," and its has an equivalent that has yet to be found when it comes to mental health, forensic psychiatrist Erik Roskes writes for The Crime Report.

The equivalent of the "Standard Model" of mental health — Higgs plays an essential part in the "Standard Model" of physics — is a world in which "people are not penalized for their illnesses but rather than an array of tools from which to choose and which they can use to become mentally healthy," Roskes writes.

Though those tools have not yet been identified, there are paths down which researchers are going to find them, including molecular and pharmaceutical research; psychotherapies and rehabilitation. Research has led to pharmaceutical approaches, "not perfect, but far preferable to a world without them," he writes. It has led to cognitive therapy to treat depression, anxiety and, in some cases, psychosis. It has also led to advances in rehabilitation of mental illnesses and developmental disabilities like autism.

Like the search for the Higgs particle, finding its equivalent in the world of mental health is worth the search, Roskes concludes. (Read more)
The discovery of the Higgs particle, which gives matter its mass, was a huge breakthrough for scientists since "confirming its existence was imperative to a full scientific understanding of the world," and its has an equivalent that has yet to be found when it comes to mental health, forensic psychiatrist Erik Roskes writes for The Crime Report.

The equivalent of the "Standard Model" of mental health — Higgs plays an essential part in the "Standard Model" of physics — is a world in which "people are not penalized for their illnesses but rather than an array of tools from which to choose and which they can use to become mentally healthy," Roskes writes.

Though those tools have not yet been identified, there are paths down which researchers are going to find them, including molecular and pharmaceutical research; psychotherapies and rehabilitation. Research has led to pharmaceutical approaches, "not perfect, but far preferable to a world without them," he writes. It has led to cognitive therapy to treat depression, anxiety and, in some cases, psychosis. It has also led to advances in rehabilitation of mental illnesses and developmental disabilities like autism.

Like the search for the Higgs particle, finding its equivalent in the world of mental health is worth the search, Roskes concludes. (Read more)
Read More


Thursday, August 9, 2012

Pimobendan for feline heart disease

Gordon SG, Saunders AB, Roland RM, et al. Effect of oral administration of pimobendan in cats with heart failure. J Am Vet Med Assoc. 2012; 241: 89-94.
 
In cats, heart disease involving congestive heart failure (CHF) is characterized predominantly by diastolic dysfunction. Pimobendan is a drug with predominantly inodilator properties that has been used in dogs with CHF to prolong survival time and reduce signs of illness. 

This study’s objective was to determine the effect of oral administration of pimobendan on clinical and echocardiographic variables and survival time in cats with heart failure typified by ventricular systolic dysfunction. Twenty-seven client-owned cats with different types of heart disease were treated with pimobendan. All of the cats had ventricular systolic dysfunction. The median survival time was 167 days. The authors concluded that pimobendan appears to be well tolerated in cats with heart failure characterized by ventricular systolic dysfunction. However, cats with systolic anterior motion of the mitral valve may develop systemic hypotension when treated with pimobendan. Additional studies to determine dosages for pimobendan and its effects are needed. [VT]

See also: MacGregor JM, Rush JE, Laste NJ, et al. Use of pimobendan in 170 cats (2006–2010). J Vet Cardiol. 2011; 13: 251-60.

More on cat health:
Winn Feline Foundation Library
Find us on Facebook
Follow us on Twitter
Read the Cat Health News Weekly
Join us on Google+

Gordon SG, Saunders AB, Roland RM, et al. Effect of oral administration of pimobendan in cats with heart failure. J Am Vet Med Assoc. 2012; 241: 89-94.
 
In cats, heart disease involving congestive heart failure (CHF) is characterized predominantly by diastolic dysfunction. Pimobendan is a drug with predominantly inodilator properties that has been used in dogs with CHF to prolong survival time and reduce signs of illness. 

This study’s objective was to determine the effect of oral administration of pimobendan on clinical and echocardiographic variables and survival time in cats with heart failure typified by ventricular systolic dysfunction. Twenty-seven client-owned cats with different types of heart disease were treated with pimobendan. All of the cats had ventricular systolic dysfunction. The median survival time was 167 days. The authors concluded that pimobendan appears to be well tolerated in cats with heart failure characterized by ventricular systolic dysfunction. However, cats with systolic anterior motion of the mitral valve may develop systemic hypotension when treated with pimobendan. Additional studies to determine dosages for pimobendan and its effects are needed. [VT]

See also: MacGregor JM, Rush JE, Laste NJ, et al. Use of pimobendan in 170 cats (2006–2010). J Vet Cardiol. 2011; 13: 251-60.

More on cat health:
Winn Feline Foundation Library
Find us on Facebook
Follow us on Twitter
Read the Cat Health News Weekly
Join us on Google+

Read More


Wednesday, August 8, 2012

No way to know how serious flu season will be this year; get your vaccine, which will be available soon, officials say

There is no way of predicting how far-reaching the flu will be this season, but this year's vaccine should be available soon, officials with the Kentucky Department for Public Health said today.

"As soon as you get the immunizations you can start administering them," Sherri Coles, Kentucky Vaccine Program assistant coordinator, told a physician during today's webinar on the subject.

Last flu season was very mild, particularly compared to the one before it, when the H1N1 flu virus was first found here. About 22,400 people nationwide were confirmed to have the flu last season. There were 26 lab-confirmed pediatric deaths caused by flu, but none were in Kentucky. Flu activity was only widespread for five weeks in Kentucky last season, in March and April.

Flu shots are recommended for everyone from 6 months of age and older. Children 6 months to 8 years of age getting the vaccine for the first time should get two doses administered at least one month apart.

The flu can be treated with antiviral drugs, Coles said, which can "lesson the symptoms and shorten the time you are sick by one or two days." The drugs should be taken within two days of getting sick, though starting them later can still be helpful for people who have a pre-existing health condition or are very sick from the flu. Tamiflu and Relenza are the two kinds of antiviral drugs available. Relenza can only be taken by people who do not have breathing problems like asthma or COPD.
There is no way of predicting how far-reaching the flu will be this season, but this year's vaccine should be available soon, officials with the Kentucky Department for Public Health said today.

"As soon as you get the immunizations you can start administering them," Sherri Coles, Kentucky Vaccine Program assistant coordinator, told a physician during today's webinar on the subject.

Last flu season was very mild, particularly compared to the one before it, when the H1N1 flu virus was first found here. About 22,400 people nationwide were confirmed to have the flu last season. There were 26 lab-confirmed pediatric deaths caused by flu, but none were in Kentucky. Flu activity was only widespread for five weeks in Kentucky last season, in March and April.

Flu shots are recommended for everyone from 6 months of age and older. Children 6 months to 8 years of age getting the vaccine for the first time should get two doses administered at least one month apart.

The flu can be treated with antiviral drugs, Coles said, which can "lesson the symptoms and shorten the time you are sick by one or two days." The drugs should be taken within two days of getting sick, though starting them later can still be helpful for people who have a pre-existing health condition or are very sick from the flu. Tamiflu and Relenza are the two kinds of antiviral drugs available. Relenza can only be taken by people who do not have breathing problems like asthma or COPD.
Read More


Tuesday, August 7, 2012

As schools resume and prepare to follow new lunch rules, federal fruit and vegetable snack program is up for debate

Bloomberg photo by Ian Waldie
With students and teachers returning, school food-service directors are working to implement the new federal school lunch regulations that take effect this year. This would be a good story for local news media, since it affects almost every student.

As school resumes, another school food program is up for debate. Congress is deciding whether frozen, canned and dried produce should be included in the Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Program. House Republicans say yes, to save money and make a wider range of options available year round. But the Senate is pushing to keep the program limited to fresh fruit and vegetables only. The argument — or food fight, as Dina ElBoghdady of The Washington Post calls it — has trade and other groups weighing in.

"If the goal is to expand and improve upon childhood nutrition, it doesn't make sense to limit the kinds of fruit and vegetables that schools serve," said Corey Henry, a spokesman for the American Frozen Food Institute. "Let the schools decide." But Sandi Kaur, acting director of nutrition services at the California Department of Education, disagrees, saying "it's the fresh that makes this program unique."

More than 50,000 students in 125 Kentucky elementary schools benefit from the program, run by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. To see which schools participate, click here. The program allows schools to distribute fresh fruit and vegetables as snacks to students and has "raised consumption in participating schools by a quarter-cup per day, or 15 percent," ElBoghdady reports. "The increase did not contribute to weight gain, suggesting that the fruit and vegetables replaced other foods." Last year, USDA spent $150 million to pay for the snacks for 3 million children. (Read more)

Bloomberg photo by Ian Waldie
With students and teachers returning, school food-service directors are working to implement the new federal school lunch regulations that take effect this year. This would be a good story for local news media, since it affects almost every student.

As school resumes, another school food program is up for debate. Congress is deciding whether frozen, canned and dried produce should be included in the Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Program. House Republicans say yes, to save money and make a wider range of options available year round. But the Senate is pushing to keep the program limited to fresh fruit and vegetables only. The argument — or food fight, as Dina ElBoghdady of The Washington Post calls it — has trade and other groups weighing in.

"If the goal is to expand and improve upon childhood nutrition, it doesn't make sense to limit the kinds of fruit and vegetables that schools serve," said Corey Henry, a spokesman for the American Frozen Food Institute. "Let the schools decide." But Sandi Kaur, acting director of nutrition services at the California Department of Education, disagrees, saying "it's the fresh that makes this program unique."

More than 50,000 students in 125 Kentucky elementary schools benefit from the program, run by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. To see which schools participate, click here. The program allows schools to distribute fresh fruit and vegetables as snacks to students and has "raised consumption in participating schools by a quarter-cup per day, or 15 percent," ElBoghdady reports. "The increase did not contribute to weight gain, suggesting that the fruit and vegetables replaced other foods." Last year, USDA spent $150 million to pay for the snacks for 3 million children. (Read more)

Read More


More hospital-acquired infections are reported in patients cared for nurses who are overworked, study finds

Getty Images stock photo.
Overworked nurses dealing with heavy patient loads are associated with increases in hospital-acquired infections, say researchers with the Center for Health Outcomes and Policy Research at the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing.

"For each 10 percent jump in the proportion of nurses who logged high levels of burnout, there was roughly one additional catheter-associated urinary tract infection per 1,000 patients and almost two extra surgical site infections per 1,000," reports JoNel Aleccia for NBC News.

Researchers conducted a survey with 7,000 registered nurses at 161 Pennsylvania hospitals and matched that data with hospital infection rates and characteristics of hospitals nationwide. The study found more than a third of nurses said they feel high levels of burnout. They cared for an average of 5.7 patients each, and "when even one patient was added to that load, the result was an additional 1,351 infections within the hospital population studied," Aleccia reports.

The study, published in the American Journal of Infection Control, also found cutting down on burnout not only reduces infections but saves money. Cutting it by 30 percent decreased urinary tract infections by 4,000 and surgical site infections by more than 2,200, resulting in a savings of between $28 million and $69 million each year, researchers found.

When it comes to nurse-to-patient ratios, no one seems to be tracking the averages, Aleccia reports. They can range from one nurse for every one or two patients in intensive care units or a one-to-five ratio, as mandated in surgical units in California. (Read more)
Getty Images stock photo.
Overworked nurses dealing with heavy patient loads are associated with increases in hospital-acquired infections, say researchers with the Center for Health Outcomes and Policy Research at the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing.

"For each 10 percent jump in the proportion of nurses who logged high levels of burnout, there was roughly one additional catheter-associated urinary tract infection per 1,000 patients and almost two extra surgical site infections per 1,000," reports JoNel Aleccia for NBC News.

Researchers conducted a survey with 7,000 registered nurses at 161 Pennsylvania hospitals and matched that data with hospital infection rates and characteristics of hospitals nationwide. The study found more than a third of nurses said they feel high levels of burnout. They cared for an average of 5.7 patients each, and "when even one patient was added to that load, the result was an additional 1,351 infections within the hospital population studied," Aleccia reports.

The study, published in the American Journal of Infection Control, also found cutting down on burnout not only reduces infections but saves money. Cutting it by 30 percent decreased urinary tract infections by 4,000 and surgical site infections by more than 2,200, resulting in a savings of between $28 million and $69 million each year, researchers found.

When it comes to nurse-to-patient ratios, no one seems to be tracking the averages, Aleccia reports. They can range from one nurse for every one or two patients in intensive care units or a one-to-five ratio, as mandated in surgical units in California. (Read more)
Read More


Monday, August 6, 2012

Scoliosis sufferer writes for latest Chicken Soup


With an enormous, plastic back brace strapped around her torso, covering everything from just under her breasts to above her thighs, this 11-year-old Andover girl sought refuge from what she remembers as feelings of humiliation.
"The Andover Bookstore is where I went, where I would escape to," said Alyson Gerber, who was especially thrilled when the children's author Barbara Cooney visited and signed her book "Hattie and the Wild Waves."
"It meant so much to me...I was always there (at the Andover Bookstore)," said Gerber, who still has the treasured book.
Now 27 and living in Manhattan, she's a writer herself. Her experience growing up in Andover with scoliosis, an abnormal curving of the spine, is part of the newest Chicken Soup for the Soul series of books. This edition ($14,95) is called "The Magic of Mothers & Daughters."
Gerber wore the brace for three years until she stopped growing at age 13. She's a proud 5-feet, 7-inches today.
Her father, Sam Gerber, is an orthopedic surgeon and first spotted her twisting vertebra. Her mother, Lori Gerber, also had scoliosis as a young teen and wore a similar brace. The Gerbers still live in town with their daughter, Caroline, 22, and 16-year-old son, Adam.
This mother-daughter relationship is typical - strained at times as Alyson Gerber writes that she defiantly blamed her mother for passing the scoliosis gene to her. But theirs is also an extremely loving relationship as Lori Gerber offered valuable emotional support as her daughter struggled with middle school ridicule.
"Don't let them see you're hurting or it will be worse. We are giving you the gift of great posture. Use it," is one tough love quote that Gerber attributes to her mother in the book.
Gerber's five-page chapter is entitled "Fusion Family" and is focused on a tough time in her life. She said she wrote the essay and submitted it for the book because middle-schoolers with scoliosis should not feel alone. By going public with her own scoliosis story she proves others know what it's like to deal with an awkward appearance during adoloescence, when body image is so important.
She writes that she looked like Popeye's thin girlfriend, Olive Oyl, but felt enormous in her cast. She was devasted when she overheard classmates referring to her as an arcade game character named Big Bertha.
Gerber went to Pike School and Governor's Academy in Byfield. She earned her bachelor's degree at Connecticut College and is working on a master's degree in writing for children at The New School in Manhattan. Her work has appeared in newspapers and magazines. Her Chicken Soup chapter is her first book-writing deal.
Members of her writing group at The New School encouraged her to submit the chapter. Writings by the group can be found at teenwritersbloc.com.
Gerber said the book can be a good conversation starter for mothers, daughters and scoliosis survivors. There are 101 stories in the book.

http://www.andovertownsman.com/arts/x825336400/Andover-native-writes-for-latest-Chicken-Soup

About Dr Kevin Lau


Dr Kevin Lau DC is the founder of Health In Your Hands, a series of tools for Scoliosis prevention and treatment. The set includes his book Your Plan for Natural Scoliosis Prevention and Treatment, a companion Scoliosis Exercises for Prevention and Correction DVD and the innovative new iPhone application ScolioTrack. Dr Kevin Lau is a graduate in Doctor of Chiropractic from RMIT University in Melbourne Australia and Masters in Holistic Nutrition. He is a member of International Society On Scoliosis Orthopaedic and Rehabilitation Treatment (SOSORT), the leading international society on conservative treatment of spinal deformities. In 2006 I was awarded the "Best Health-care Provider Awards" by the largest Newspaper publication in Singapore on October 18 2006 as well as being interviewed on Primetime Channel News Asia as well as other TV and Radio. For more information on Dr Kevin Lau, watch his interviews or get a free sneak peek of his book, go to: http://www.hiyh.info.

With an enormous, plastic back brace strapped around her torso, covering everything from just under her breasts to above her thighs, this 11-year-old Andover girl sought refuge from what she remembers as feelings of humiliation.
"The Andover Bookstore is where I went, where I would escape to," said Alyson Gerber, who was especially thrilled when the children's author Barbara Cooney visited and signed her book "Hattie and the Wild Waves."
"It meant so much to me...I was always there (at the Andover Bookstore)," said Gerber, who still has the treasured book.
Now 27 and living in Manhattan, she's a writer herself. Her experience growing up in Andover with scoliosis, an abnormal curving of the spine, is part of the newest Chicken Soup for the Soul series of books. This edition ($14,95) is called "The Magic of Mothers & Daughters."
Gerber wore the brace for three years until she stopped growing at age 13. She's a proud 5-feet, 7-inches today.
Her father, Sam Gerber, is an orthopedic surgeon and first spotted her twisting vertebra. Her mother, Lori Gerber, also had scoliosis as a young teen and wore a similar brace. The Gerbers still live in town with their daughter, Caroline, 22, and 16-year-old son, Adam.
This mother-daughter relationship is typical - strained at times as Alyson Gerber writes that she defiantly blamed her mother for passing the scoliosis gene to her. But theirs is also an extremely loving relationship as Lori Gerber offered valuable emotional support as her daughter struggled with middle school ridicule.
"Don't let them see you're hurting or it will be worse. We are giving you the gift of great posture. Use it," is one tough love quote that Gerber attributes to her mother in the book.
Gerber's five-page chapter is entitled "Fusion Family" and is focused on a tough time in her life. She said she wrote the essay and submitted it for the book because middle-schoolers with scoliosis should not feel alone. By going public with her own scoliosis story she proves others know what it's like to deal with an awkward appearance during adoloescence, when body image is so important.
She writes that she looked like Popeye's thin girlfriend, Olive Oyl, but felt enormous in her cast. She was devasted when she overheard classmates referring to her as an arcade game character named Big Bertha.
Gerber went to Pike School and Governor's Academy in Byfield. She earned her bachelor's degree at Connecticut College and is working on a master's degree in writing for children at The New School in Manhattan. Her work has appeared in newspapers and magazines. Her Chicken Soup chapter is her first book-writing deal.
Members of her writing group at The New School encouraged her to submit the chapter. Writings by the group can be found at teenwritersbloc.com.
Gerber said the book can be a good conversation starter for mothers, daughters and scoliosis survivors. There are 101 stories in the book.

http://www.andovertownsman.com/arts/x825336400/Andover-native-writes-for-latest-Chicken-Soup

About Dr Kevin Lau


Dr Kevin Lau DC is the founder of Health In Your Hands, a series of tools for Scoliosis prevention and treatment. The set includes his book Your Plan for Natural Scoliosis Prevention and Treatment, a companion Scoliosis Exercises for Prevention and Correction DVD and the innovative new iPhone application ScolioTrack. Dr Kevin Lau is a graduate in Doctor of Chiropractic from RMIT University in Melbourne Australia and Masters in Holistic Nutrition. He is a member of International Society On Scoliosis Orthopaedic and Rehabilitation Treatment (SOSORT), the leading international society on conservative treatment of spinal deformities. In 2006 I was awarded the "Best Health-care Provider Awards" by the largest Newspaper publication in Singapore on October 18 2006 as well as being interviewed on Primetime Channel News Asia as well as other TV and Radio. For more information on Dr Kevin Lau, watch his interviews or get a free sneak peek of his book, go to: http://www.hiyh.info.
Read More


CDC: Ten swine flu cases reported last week were linked to Ohio's Butler County Fair; warns nation's fairgoers to be cautious

Centers for Disease Control officials in Atlanta say 29 human cases of the new strain of the H3N2 swine flu have been confirmed in the last year, including 12 last week. Ten of the new cases were linked to the Butler County Fair in southwest Ohio. Butler County is just north of Cincinnati's Hamilton County. The fair ended last weekend. None of the cases have been tied to human-to-human transmission and all 12 of the new patients had close contact with swine prior to getting sick. The two other new cases occurred in Hawaii and Indiana. (CBS News photo)

Health official told CBS News that because county and state fair season in full swing, attendees should avoid taking food and drinks into barns and to wash their hands after they have been near animals. Pregnant women, young children, the elderly and people with weakened immune systems are especially at risk for developing the flu strain. So far, the strain hasn't spread easily, and recent cases have been mild. (Read more)
Centers for Disease Control officials in Atlanta say 29 human cases of the new strain of the H3N2 swine flu have been confirmed in the last year, including 12 last week. Ten of the new cases were linked to the Butler County Fair in southwest Ohio. Butler County is just north of Cincinnati's Hamilton County. The fair ended last weekend. None of the cases have been tied to human-to-human transmission and all 12 of the new patients had close contact with swine prior to getting sick. The two other new cases occurred in Hawaii and Indiana. (CBS News photo)

Health official told CBS News that because county and state fair season in full swing, attendees should avoid taking food and drinks into barns and to wash their hands after they have been near animals. Pregnant women, young children, the elderly and people with weakened immune systems are especially at risk for developing the flu strain. So far, the strain hasn't spread easily, and recent cases have been mild. (Read more)
Read More


Many more serious cases of West Nile virus reported this year, but only one in Kentucky

Though only one Kentuckian has been affected, more serious cases of people infected by the West Nile virus have been reported this year than any since 2004. Through July, 241 cases were reported in 22 states. The virus has caused four deaths. Nearly 150 cases have been in Texas, particularly in the Dallas area, reports Mike Stobbe for The Associated Press.

Of the 241 cases, 144 were considered serious, meaning the virus spread to the brain and nervous system, causing, among other ailments, encephalitis. Last year, less than 700 cases were reported.
Health officials blame the combination of a mild winter, early spring and hot summer, prime conditions for mosquitoes to breed. "Unless the weather changes dramatically, we'll see more cases (in 2012) than we have in the last couple of years," said Roger Nasci of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

About 1 in 5 people who are infected with the virus get sick. One in 150 get severe symptoms, including neck stiffness, disorientation, coma and paralysis, Stobbe reports. (Read more)
Though only one Kentuckian has been affected, more serious cases of people infected by the West Nile virus have been reported this year than any since 2004. Through July, 241 cases were reported in 22 states. The virus has caused four deaths. Nearly 150 cases have been in Texas, particularly in the Dallas area, reports Mike Stobbe for The Associated Press.

Of the 241 cases, 144 were considered serious, meaning the virus spread to the brain and nervous system, causing, among other ailments, encephalitis. Last year, less than 700 cases were reported.
Health officials blame the combination of a mild winter, early spring and hot summer, prime conditions for mosquitoes to breed. "Unless the weather changes dramatically, we'll see more cases (in 2012) than we have in the last couple of years," said Roger Nasci of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

About 1 in 5 people who are infected with the virus get sick. One in 150 get severe symptoms, including neck stiffness, disorientation, coma and paralysis, Stobbe reports. (Read more)
Read More


Free webinars and annual forum to be hosted by Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky

The Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky will host several educational events in an effort to help communities improve their health.

On Wednesday, Aug. 8, the foundation will host a webinar about evidence-based policies and programs that improve health. The talk, called "Stop Reinventing the Wheel: A Useful Guide to Evidence-Based Health Programs," will be presented by Katherine Wilson, dissemination and implementation team leader with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. To register, click here. The deadline to register is Tuesday, Aug. 7.

An Aug. 29 webinar will look at ways communities can keep programs going when funding ends. Dr. Stephen Orton, deputy director of the Office of Executive Education with the North Carolina Institute for Public Health, will lead the talk. To register, click here. The deadline is Aug. 28.

On Sept. 17, the foundation will host its annual Howard L. Bost Memorial Health Policy Forum at the Embassy Suites in Lexington, with the theme "No Wrong Door: Integrating Care for Better Health." It will feature several speakers working at state and federal levels. Breakout sessions include:
• Respect: Working Across Disciplines for Patient-Centered Care
• Good Medicine is Good Business
• Health Home Opportunities, Focus on Outcomes
• Advocating for What You Need in the System You Have
The forum is free. Civic leaders, medical health and behavioral health providers, public officials, public-health professionals, business owners, policymakers, faith-based leaders, researchers and academics, coalitions and advocates are encouraged to attend. The forum runs from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sept. 17. To register, click here.
The Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky will host several educational events in an effort to help communities improve their health.

On Wednesday, Aug. 8, the foundation will host a webinar about evidence-based policies and programs that improve health. The talk, called "Stop Reinventing the Wheel: A Useful Guide to Evidence-Based Health Programs," will be presented by Katherine Wilson, dissemination and implementation team leader with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. To register, click here. The deadline to register is Tuesday, Aug. 7.

An Aug. 29 webinar will look at ways communities can keep programs going when funding ends. Dr. Stephen Orton, deputy director of the Office of Executive Education with the North Carolina Institute for Public Health, will lead the talk. To register, click here. The deadline is Aug. 28.

On Sept. 17, the foundation will host its annual Howard L. Bost Memorial Health Policy Forum at the Embassy Suites in Lexington, with the theme "No Wrong Door: Integrating Care for Better Health." It will feature several speakers working at state and federal levels. Breakout sessions include:
• Respect: Working Across Disciplines for Patient-Centered Care
• Good Medicine is Good Business
• Health Home Opportunities, Focus on Outcomes
• Advocating for What You Need in the System You Have
The forum is free. Civic leaders, medical health and behavioral health providers, public officials, public-health professionals, business owners, policymakers, faith-based leaders, researchers and academics, coalitions and advocates are encouraged to attend. The forum runs from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sept. 17. To register, click here.
Read More


Under scrutiny and criticism, cabinet changes way it handles reviews of children who die or nearly die from abuse or neglect

The Cabinet for Health and Family Services is now using a standard form when conducting internal reviews involving children who died or nearly died from abuse or neglect. Staff are now also being instructed to focus on specific topics in the reports. These are some of the ways the cabinet has changed how it handles the reviews since it came under "intense scrutiny from the state's largest newspapers," reports Beth Musgrave for the Lexington Herald-Leader.

A recent Herald-Leader analysis of 84 reviews from 2009 and 2010 showed there were vast disparities between how they were conducted in different parts of the state, with some of them lengthy and detailed and others just one-page reports that sometimes didn't even include the facts of a child's death.

Teresa James, acting commissioner of the Department for Community Based Services, said the standard form allows for "a greater amount of consistency." Recommendations that stem from the reviews, which are meant to zero in on ways the cabinet could have helped avoid the outcome, will also now require action plans.

Terry Brooks, executive director of Kentucky Youth Advocates, praised the effort. "This is a critical and significant step forward in terms of accountability, transparency and quality assurance," he said. (Read more)
The Cabinet for Health and Family Services is now using a standard form when conducting internal reviews involving children who died or nearly died from abuse or neglect. Staff are now also being instructed to focus on specific topics in the reports. These are some of the ways the cabinet has changed how it handles the reviews since it came under "intense scrutiny from the state's largest newspapers," reports Beth Musgrave for the Lexington Herald-Leader.

A recent Herald-Leader analysis of 84 reviews from 2009 and 2010 showed there were vast disparities between how they were conducted in different parts of the state, with some of them lengthy and detailed and others just one-page reports that sometimes didn't even include the facts of a child's death.

Teresa James, acting commissioner of the Department for Community Based Services, said the standard form allows for "a greater amount of consistency." Recommendations that stem from the reviews, which are meant to zero in on ways the cabinet could have helped avoid the outcome, will also now require action plans.

Terry Brooks, executive director of Kentucky Youth Advocates, praised the effort. "This is a critical and significant step forward in terms of accountability, transparency and quality assurance," he said. (Read more)
Read More


Contraceptive implants for cats

Ackermann CL, Volpato R, Destro FC, et al. Ovarian activity reversibility after the use of deslorelin acetate as a short-term contraceptive in domestic queens. Theriogenology. 2012; 78: 817-22.
 
Deslorelin is a drug classed as a gonadotropin-releasing hormone analogue. It has been used in various species, usually as a long-lasting implant, to control fertility. The drug is currently not licensed for this use in dogs or cats in Canada or the United States. However, several studies have evaluated the use of deslorelin implants to control fertility in domestic queens. Estrus behavior and estrogen secretion can be suppressed for more than 1 year after the implant is placed.

The goal of this study was to determine if the effect of the drug on ovarian activity is truly reversible, thereby allowing for only temporary suppression of reproduction when desired. Ten mature queens were given deslorelin implants and monitored with vaginal cytology for 90 days, after which the implants were removed. Ten days later, the queens were treated to induce estrus and ovulation and then spayed. As has been documented previously, some queens went into estrus shortly after the implant was placed but then estrus was suppressed in all queens. Following implant removal, all queens responded to treatment to induce estrus and ovulation and oocytes were recovered from the ovaries at surgery. The researchers conclude that deslorelin implants can be used as reversible, short-term contraception in queens. [SL]

See also: Toydemir TSF, Kılıçarslan MR and Olgaç V. Effects of the GnRH analogue deslorelin implants on reproduction in female domestic cats. Theriogenology. 2012; 77: 662-74.

More on cat health:
Winn Feline Foundation Library
Find us on Facebook
Follow us on Twitter
Read the Cat Health News Weekly
Join us on Google+

Ackermann CL, Volpato R, Destro FC, et al. Ovarian activity reversibility after the use of deslorelin acetate as a short-term contraceptive in domestic queens. Theriogenology. 2012; 78: 817-22.
 
Deslorelin is a drug classed as a gonadotropin-releasing hormone analogue. It has been used in various species, usually as a long-lasting implant, to control fertility. The drug is currently not licensed for this use in dogs or cats in Canada or the United States. However, several studies have evaluated the use of deslorelin implants to control fertility in domestic queens. Estrus behavior and estrogen secretion can be suppressed for more than 1 year after the implant is placed.

The goal of this study was to determine if the effect of the drug on ovarian activity is truly reversible, thereby allowing for only temporary suppression of reproduction when desired. Ten mature queens were given deslorelin implants and monitored with vaginal cytology for 90 days, after which the implants were removed. Ten days later, the queens were treated to induce estrus and ovulation and then spayed. As has been documented previously, some queens went into estrus shortly after the implant was placed but then estrus was suppressed in all queens. Following implant removal, all queens responded to treatment to induce estrus and ovulation and oocytes were recovered from the ovaries at surgery. The researchers conclude that deslorelin implants can be used as reversible, short-term contraception in queens. [SL]

See also: Toydemir TSF, Kılıçarslan MR and Olgaç V. Effects of the GnRH analogue deslorelin implants on reproduction in female domestic cats. Theriogenology. 2012; 77: 662-74.

More on cat health:
Winn Feline Foundation Library
Find us on Facebook
Follow us on Twitter
Read the Cat Health News Weekly
Join us on Google+

Read More


Sunday, August 5, 2012

Peripheral Neuropathy: Real and Lasting Treatment Results

Peripheral Neuropathy: Killing Hands or Feet? A There is a new HOPE for those that suffer due to Peripheral Neuropathy! Peripheral Neuropathy is widespread, afflicting an estimated 20 million people in the United States. If someone is diabetic t

Peripheral Neuropathy: Killing Hands or Feet? A There is a new HOPE for those that suffer due to Peripheral Neuropathy! Peripheral Neuropathy is widespread, afflicting an estimated 20 million people in the United States. If someone is diabetic t

Read More