Sunday, 3 June 2012

Elizabeth Edwards set an example on how to manage a terminal disease



The conclusion of the John Edwards trial, in which the disgraced former presidential hopeful was acquitted on one charge of campaign finance fraud and in which a mistrial was declared on five other counts, has rekindled for many Americans the memory of Edwards' estranged wife,Elizabeth, and how she managed her diagnosis of terminal cancer.
In the end, Elizabeth Edwards chose to live her final days as she had most of her life – her way. (From The MagazineEdwards in 2006.) She stopped cancertreatments, started saying goodbye to friends and lived as comfortably as she could at home.

For many people with aterminal illness, accepting death is not an option. Many will pursue every viable medical treatment available to prolong their life. As long as their health provider allows, they will fight their condition to the end. They will not give up.
But for those who realize they’ve exhausted the medical realm and decide – with or without their doctor’s advice – to end treatment, it’s not about giving up.Palliative care is about support and helping patients live their last days as comfortably as possible. For terminally ill patients and their families, making the decision to end therapy is never an easy one. The best approach should come after careful consideration. 

As Edwards said during her last public appearance in October at Cleary University, “I am dying. Of course you are, too. We all are.” 

For her and many patients with a terminal illness, it’s less about dyingand more about how to live.

Ripped Jeans by Emmy Rossum



Beautiful actress Emmy Rossum showed off her sexy in a casual ripped jeans. Amazing fashion sense, wearing an eye-catching casual look while out in Los Angeles. Looks like, ripped denim trend is back in full force as lots of celebs are seen wearing this sexy style of denim around the streets.
‘The Day After Tomorrow’ actress looked fresh and stunning, donning a hot pair of ripped jeans. The diva gave great fashion tip by teaming her ripped blue jeans with a cool and fashionable top that looked perfect with her skinny jeans. Ripped jeans fashion is accepted and enjoyed by lots of Hollywood celebrities including Stephanie Pratt, Kim Kardashian, Nicky Hilton and many more. Emmy Rossum added more style to her look by sporting exquisite black boots.
Hot and sexy, Emmy Rossum was carrying a fabulous white handbag. She kept her look more casual & simple and wore no jewel pieces. ‘The Phantom of the Opera’ star left her hair loose in a natural way and looked beyond gorgeous. Wow…she was looking elegant and totally graceful in her alluring casual look. We just can’t stop staring at her.
So, what are your thoughts about Sexy Emmy Rossum’s casual look?

Kim Kardashian Wearing Celine Phantom Bag



For the model that  wearing celine phantom bag product is Kim Kardashian. This handbag may not be you normally use, like a regular plain bag model but can accommodate all the items you need. This handbag is a classic, but very impressive and has a variety of functional. Sleek shape and supported with a smooth leather design that makes it multipurpose for day and night. You also can carry this handbag for shopping in the daytime. In addition, you can also combine this bag with your favorite jeans, blazer and boots, or with a little black dress to look beautiful. Kim Kardashian added a bright tangerine-colored dress and a pair of nude heels, so of course it is an amazing look paired with the bag. Either way, it is an incredibly chic accessory to add to your wardrobe. It is not only stylish, but it is big enough to carry all of your knick knacks for a night out, without being big, awkward and clunky.

Firefighters battle largest wildfire in New Mexico's history



A record wildfire raged on in southwestern New Mexico on Sunday, belching out a wall of smoke as it devoured thousands of acres and advanced across the rugged wilderness.
Authorities cautioned children, adults with heart disease and other sensitive groups to stay indoors and avoid the smoke.
The blaze -- the biggest in the state's history -- has scorched an area more than one and a half times bigger than Chicago.
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A total of 1,236 personnel are fighting the wildfire, which is 17% contained, U.S. Forest Service officials said Sunday.
Two separate lightning strikes started two wildfires that merged, creating the giant fire.
Lightning ignited the Whitewater Baldy Complex wildfire last month, sparking a blaze that has devoured more than 241,000 acres -- about 380 square miles -- in the southwest portion of the state.
Firefighters made good progress on the northeastern portions Saturday, the forest service said, while along the southwest boundary "reduced fire behavior was observed as the fire moved into gentle sloping hills of pinon and juniper."
On Sunday, firefighters were "scouting the area along Gila Mountain Trail and the Middle Fork River for potential control lines," the forest service said in a statement. A contingency line was being constructed "a safe distance east of the fires along Road 150. Firefighters will also strengthen containment lines south of the community of Mogollon."
An evacuation order in Mogollon will be lifted for residents and business owners will be lifted effective Monday; on Wednesday, the community will be open to the public, the fire service said.
The Baldy Fire started May 9 in an inaccessible area of the rugged wilderness and the Whitewater Fire was reported on May 16 several miles away, according to Forest Service officials.
The two fires in the Gila National Forest merged May 23, enhanced by drought and sustained winds of 40 mph to 50 mph, authorities said.
Extreme drought could mean the smoke in the region will persist until the monsoon season, which typically begins in July, said Catherine Torres, secretary of the New Mexico department of health.
The blaze is 15 miles east of Glenwood, New Mexico.

Obama's campaign going to the dogs -- and cats and chickens



Tina Gangidine is so passionate about President Barack Obama, even her pet lovebird campaigned for him.
"I left the campaign sign by her cage, and whenever she would get out she would always hop right over to it and sit for long stretches staring at it," said the retired middle school teacher from Ohio.
"I guess she was a political bird. Well, so is the rest of her family, so she came by it honestly."
Gangidine campaigns in her swing state for the president pretty much nonstop, but she paused long enough to post a photo of the starry-eyed creature -- known as The Bird, H.R.H. (Her Royal Highness) -- on the Pet Lovers for Obama Facebook page.
It got more "likes" and thoughtful comments than almost anything else she's ever posted, and that includes the Twitter feed and Facebook pages she runs for her neighborhood's Obama campaign. Suddenly, she realized there was a lesson.
"When we are phone banking, we have to work really hard to get someone to pick up and talk with us," Gangidine said. "People love their pets so they pay attention to this kind of thing, and it's a really positive message for them to see from us."
Obama outspends Romney online
Presidential pets have certainly played a role in politicking before. President Franklin D. Roosevelt often appeared in photos with Fala,his Scottish terrier. President George W. Bush sent holiday videosof his dog Barney every Christmas. President Bill Clinton's cat, Socks, even had its own book.
But this virtual campaign by Obama for America to encourage people to "like" its Facebook page, post photos of their pets and recruit friends is taking the presidential love of pets to a whole new level. It seems to be working.
More than 16,500 people have "liked" the page so far. Hundreds of others have posted photos of their furry friends. A dog named Teddy Roosevelt abandoned his namesake's political party to wear a navy Obama shirt. Baby, a gray cat, looks smart in a "Cats for Obama" collar. There's even an unnamed chicken sporting an Obama bandana.
Such pet-specific merchandise is available on an accompanying Obama campaign site. There's an "I Meow for Michelle" cat collar, a "2012 Barack's best friend" dog collar with a matching leash, a Bo "I bark for Barack" car magnet, and many others. All purchases count as campaign donations.
Chicagoan Lisa Capretto posted a photo of her pit-bull mix Rocco sporting an Obama T-shirt and sitting patiently with human-sized Obama sunglasses perched on his wet nose.
"My brother works with the campaign, and he brought over a bunch of gear," Capretto said. "Rocco is clearly such a tolerant and sweet dog."
While Capretto and her husband have donated money to Obama's re-election effort, the photo she submitted is the only real campaigning she plans to do.
"We are still enthusiastic about the president, but I'll leave the grass-roots campaigning to my brother," she said. "I do like this particular effort, though, and I thought the least I could do was lend my support by taking this ridiculous picture."
There is no parallel pet-themed campaign for Republican candidate Mitt Romney. There is a Vets for Romney Facebook page, but that's for the military -- not the animal -- kind of vet. A Dogs Against Romney Facebook page has racked up more than 55,000 "likes," but it was created as a tongue-in-cheek response to the story of how Romney strapped a crate containing his Irish setter, Seamus, to the roof of his car during a road trip to Canada. The page is not sanctioned by any campaign.
"We've seen this for months. The Obama campaign would rather talk about anything under the sun, including dogs, if it means they can distract from the most important issue on the minds of every American -- jobs and the economy," Republican National Committeespokeswoman Kirsten Kukowski said.
"Every minute team Obama talks about something other than jobs and the economy, they are attempting to hide Obama's record from voters."
The Obama campaign won't comment on its digital strategy. But its attempt to engage with the pet set may now be aimed at many more voters.
As a part of its general online ad blitz, Obama for America created an ad in which the candidate himself never appears. Instead, under the title "Join Pet Lovers for Obama," is a lone photo of the president's dog, Bo. None of the popular online animal sites likePetfinders.comDogster.com, or icanhascheezburger.com say they've received the ad, but the ad has run on several general news sites, which reach a broader audience.
"They are clearly wide-casting with this ad and are looking for places where they can persuade swing voters and independents and women with this," said Drew Westen, an Emory University psychology professor and author of "The Political Brain," a book about the role of emotion in deciding elections.
"It's a nice, neutral message. Who doesn't like a dog?"
Kate Kaye, senior editor for ClickZ, a trade publication that covers the digital advertising industry, thinks the dog ads are a strategic attempt to cultivate a certain type of voter.
"Maybe Obama's staff thinks people who are sentimental about their animals are more likely to be interested in more liberal issues," Kaye said. "As the campaign builds up its data on who views these ads, they can go back later and specifically target that reader with whatever their next appropriate issue ad is."
Denise Small, a volunteer with the Humane Society of Western Montana, submitted a photo of her 16-year-old Persian cat Mysty wearing an Obama bandana to Pet Lovers for Obama. She thinks the pet campaign lends the president credibility.
"It helps him seem so genuine," she said. "For me, as someone who is passionate about animals, how genuine someone is as a human is most important to me in a politician. I think he reflects my values, and it is clear he is a passionate advocate for human rights and for low-income people. I don't see that from the other side."
The Facebook page also has kept Small engaged with the Obama campaign. She visits it regularly to click through and comment on other people's pictures. Gangidine, who put her lovebird's photo on the page, also continues to visit the site. She thinks it resonates with voters who appreciate seeing something positive when so much else about the campaign -- especially advertising -- is negative.
"Something like this reaches everyday people," she said, "and we're going to need every one of them to get out there."
The campaign volunteer says she would happily post other photos of her Obama-curious bird if it would help her candidate, but unfortunately, The Bird H.R.H died recently.
"She went to sleep when I was at a Democratic organizing meeting, of all things," Gangidine said. Not all is lost though. Gangidine is considering putting a tiny Obama scarf on her son's rescue hamster, Stinky.
"Although I'd have to take the picture superfast," she said. "He is a hamster, after all. It's likely he'd eat it. And that message might not seem as supportive."

Adopting stronger graduated licensing laws could sharply reduce deaths and crashes



If every state strengthened all five areas of their graduated licensing laws, more than 500 teen lives could be saved and over 9,500 collisions prevented, according to a new analysis by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS).
The five areas of graduated driver license (GDL) programs are permit age, practice driving hours, license age, night driving, and passenger restrictions. Some states excel in one or more areas, but no state has adopted all the best practices in each category. While IIHS research has found that states that have stronger laws have less fatal crashes and collisions, there is room for improvement.
Here is a list of the best GDL provisions by state:
Permit age of 16
Connecticut
Delaware
District of Columbia
Kentucky
New Jersey
New York
Pennsylvania
Massachusetts
Rhode Island
65 practice hours
Pennsylvania

Licensing at age 17

New Jersey

8 p.m. driving restriction

Idaho (sunset to sunrise)
South Carolina (6 p.m.)
No teen passengers
Alaska
California
Colorado
Connecticut
District of Columbia
Georgia
Indiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Nevada
Oregon
Utah
Vermont
Washington
West Virginia
In 2000, IIHS began to recognize the states with the best programs by using a rating system from good to poor. The Institute has now replaced the old ratings system and launched an interactive online calculator that will estimate the reduction in collision claims and fatal crashes that a state can achieve if they strengthen certain aspects of their laws.
The IIHS report estimates that some states could even reduce their fatal crashes by half among 15-17 year olds. For example, Iowa and South Dakota are two states that could potentially see significant reductions in teen driving deaths if they take some action. Both states allow 14 year olds to obtain a learner's permit and don't have any restrictions on teen passengers. If Iowa adopted stronger laws across each provision, they could see a 55-percent reduction in fatal crashes. In South Dakota it can be a larger safety gain--a 63-percent drop in deaths by strengthening and changing the current laws.
On the other end of the spectrum, Connecticut is the closest to best practices, but it could realize an estimated 17-percent reduction in fatal crashes if they strengthened the practice hours, license age, and night driving restrictions.
Car crashes are the number-one killer of teens. And while fatalities have dropped significantly since 1996, there is still more can be done to reduce the over 3,000 teens that die every year on our roads.


Can you trust online 'user reviews' of hospitals?



You might feel comfortable choosing a car or washing machine based at least in part on what other people say online. But how about picking a hospital? A new British study suggests those hospital user reviews can be helpful.
The website of the National Health Service, England's public health-care system, allows people to rate their hospital experiences by assigning scores to various aspects of their care, such as how frequently hospital staff worked together and if they were involved with decisions about their own care. British researchers compared more than 10,000 such patient reviews submitted in 2009 and 2010 to the results of a paper-based survey that the government and researchers use to assess patient experience. They found that the online patient reviews matched up quite nicely with the formal, and much more expensive, survey results, and even correlated to some extent with hospital mortality rates.
"The findings suggest that unsolicited online hospital reviews might help you learn what your experiences in a particular hospital will be like," says John Santa, M.D. director of the Consumer Reports Health Ratings Center. "That might help you choose a hospital, and also alert you to the weaknesses of a hospital so that you can take precautions if you or someone you know is admitted there."
Our hospital Ratings are based in part on the results of a similar U.S. survey of patient experience. They also include information on how well hospital patients fared, such as their chance of developing a bloodstream infection.

Kids with diabetes likely to have asthma as well



A new research report suggests some disturbing news for parents: Children with diabetes might be likely to suffer from asthma as well. More over, kids with both chronic health conditions may have a tougher time controlling their blood glucose levels, say researchers.
The report, published in the October issue of Pediatrics, found that 11 percent of the 2,000 children and young adults (age 3- to 21-years old) with diabetes also had asthma. While that's only slightly higher than the approximately 9 percent of the U.S. population that suffers from asthma, the researchers report bigger differences when digging into the data.
Among study participants with type 2 diabetes, researchers note that 16 percent also suffered from asthma. What's more, even though only 10 percent of participants with type 1 diabetes have asthma, they also have poor blood glucose levels. Thirty-seven percent of those kids were likely to have hemoglobin A1C levels of more than 9.5 percent.
Lead researcher Mary Helen Black of the department of research and evaluation at Kaiser Permanente Southern California says most of the diabetic participants in her research study also suffered from obesity. But she says that there is no clear explanation why children who suffer from either types of diabetes as well as asthma appear to have difficulties controlling blood sugar levels.
Black says the study also finds that participants who managed their asthma with leukotriene drugs, such as Singulair, appeared to have much better control over A1C levels. However, it may be simply that patients who are taking better control over their asthmatic condition are also managing their diabetes as well.
The bottom line, Black told Reuters: Parents with diabetic children should be alert for signs of asthma as well.

U.S. ranks 131st in the world in preventing premature births


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Each year, 12 percent of American babies, or nearly half a million infants, enter the world too soon. That gives us a premature birth rate on par with that of Somalia, Thailand, and Turkey, and behind 130 other countries.
That was the finding of a new report, called Born Too Soon, that is the first to look at preterm birth rates by country, published by the March of Dimes Foundation, the Partnership for Maternal, Newborn, and Child Health, Save the Children, and the World Health Organization.
Infants in the U.S. who are born before 37 weeks of completed pregnancy are more likely to survive than those born in many other parts of the world. But prematurity is still the leading cause of newborn death in the U.S. And those who survive may face breathing problems, cerebral palsy, intellectual disabilities, and other lifelong health challenges. Even babies born just a few weeks early have higher rates of hospitalization and illness than full-term infants.
Prematurity also takes an economic toll, adding $26 billion yearly to U.S. health-care costs according to the National Academy of Science's Institute of Medicine.
Reasons for the high rate include more older women having babies and the use of fertility treatments that result in twins and triplets, according to Christopher Howson, Ph.D., vice president for global programs at the March of Dimes and one of the study authors. Also, some population groups are at extremely high risk. For example, nearly 18 percent of African American babies are born too soon.
But one of the main problems appears to be a health-care system that does too little to help moms enter their pregnancies healthy and too much to intervene as women give birth.
Howson points out that nearly 30 percent of pregnant women in the U.S. do not see a health-care provider during their first trimester. He says:
While we do a great job of taking care of preemies, we do not do a good job with making care universally available before conception and during pregnancy.
In addition, while the trend is shifting, the U.S. has seen a rise in the number of medically unnecessary cesarean births and inductions scheduled for convenience or because the baby's gestational age is unknown.
The good news is that the preterm birth rate has decreased modestly over the last four years. "Improvement is not happening as fast as we would like, but it does show that people are becoming more aware of the risks of preterm birth as well of the need to improve the quality of care," Howson says.
Women who are pregnant or may become pregnant can take specific steps to dramatically reduce their risk of premature birth. For tips on how to have the healthiest possible pregnancy and delivery as well as a list of interventions to avoid when not medically necessary, see our report What to reject when you're expecting.

GameStop Pushed Me Out Because I Refused To Upsell



You can't walk into a GameStop without having to fend off requests to sign up for a membership and preorder games. A former manager says he refused to take part in the often irritating environment, faced a demotion due to poor upselling numbers and lost his house as a result.
He writes:
I am the ex-assistant manager of a GameStop location somewhere in the eastern United States. I'm writing you to inform you of my horror story with this company.
I started off as a simple clerk (or Game Advisor as they're called in GameStop land). Three months into my job, I received a promotion to shift leader (Senior Game Advisor). This, in turn, resulted in a pay raise and more hours which allowed me to quit my second job.
Enter recession.
While part time, our hours as lower level management were higher than those of regular employees. I quit my second job with the prospect of a better future with GameStop (and while it was not their fault the hours got shafted, it still made for a struggle to get by).
A year and a half into my tenure, I was approached by my store manager informing me that an opportunity had recently become available in a store 25 miles away. I happily accepted.
Christmas time in 2009 rolled around and I was now "Happily" placed at a smaller volume store as the assistant manager (full time!). Things were great for a while...
As many of you readers already know, if you don't sell a certain percentage of GameStop's "exclusive" membership cards (referred to as Edge Cards), and meet a certain percentage of reservations, you are worthless to the company. Let me simply state that I believe the customer's satisfaction comes first. Apparently, that's a frowned upon statement in GameStop land as I soon received a nice write-up telling me to "Improve my numbers or be demoted".
I was faced with a difficult decision; be demoted and lose hours and lose my house, or quit and lose my house. I elected the latter option and soon landed another full time job making less money but with more hours (which ALSO didn't work out.. but I digress)
My point of this writing is not to receive your sympathy, but simply to give you some insight into the workings of the company.
"Sell Edge cards and Reservations or lose your job".
On a much more hilarious and sad note, I now work for Best Buy / Geek Squad.

JCPenney Sparks Protest From One Million Moms By Showing Two Gay Dads In Father's Day Catalog



Far from backing away from the kind of same-sex imagery groups like One Million Moms have protested against in the past, JCPenney is embracing gay couples once again with a new ad featuring two dads and their kids for Father's Day.
The ad features Todd and Cooper and their kids, Mason and Claire, in the midst of what seems to be a fun family moment, with the text "First Pals" and the family's names in the right hand corner. The caption reads:
"What makes Dad so cool? He's the swim coach, tent maker, best friend, bike fixer and hug giver - all rolled into one. Or two."
Cooper told the Dallas Voice that they were asked by a casting agent to be in the June catalog after the agent saw his family's Christmas photo on Facebook. They agreed and did a photo shoot.
"The photo is just a one-second photo of our life," he said. "It's a candid moment of how we interact with each other."
He adds that they were told about the OMM situation — the group briefly boycotted JCPenney over its hiring of Ellen DeGeneres as a company spokeswoman, and also spoke out against an earlier ad featuring two moms — but that it wasn't an issue for them.
"Obviously we're not ashamed of our family," he said. "It's very tastefully done."
OMM responded to the Father's Day ad on Thursday on their web site, urging people to return the catalogs, avoid shopping at the store for Father's Day, and write to JCPenney. Their statement reads, in part:
"It is obvious that JCP would rather take sides than remain neutral in the culture war. JCP will hear from the other side so they need to hear from us as well. Our persistence will pay off! One day we will answer for our actions or lack of them. We must remain diligent and stand up for Biblical values and truth. Scripture says multiple times that homosexuality is wrong, and God will not tolerate this sinful nature."

Michigan Medical Marijuana Users Gain Ability To Defend Themselves In Court



People in Michigan who use marijuana for medical purposes now have the right to use their health issues to defend themselves in court — even if they don't have a medical marijuana card — thanks to a Michigan Supreme Court ruling.
Until this point, defending yourself against a marijuana-related offense by saying you use the drug to treat an ailment had not been allowed. But the high court (no pun intended) ruled that a 2008 law permits the use of medical marijuana as an affirmative defense.
"This ruling will allow us to present a case and go to trial," one lawyer with several clients involved in marijuana-related cases tell Detroit News. "It's a game-changer. Up to this point, the Court of Appeals decisions have eliminated and eradicated the right of the people to present a defense to a jury. ... Police will continue to arrest first and ask questions later, but prosecutors are going to have to rethink what kind of cases they want to pursue."
The ACLU of Michigan hailed the court's decision, saying that, "A patient who uses marijuana to treat their medical conditions with the approval by their doctor should not be punished for mere technical errors regarding the number of plants or how they were secured."
The court ruled that someone arrested in Michigan on a marijuana-related offense can attempt to use their use of medical marijuana as defense if they provide a physician's statement certifying the defendant is a patient who has a qualifying medical condition to use marijuana. That statement must also have been written at some point between 2008 and the date of the alleged crime.
Writes the court in its opinion:
Because the MMMA (Michigan Medical Marijuana Act) was the result of a voter initiative, our goal is to ascertain and give effect to the intent of the electorate, rather than the Legislature, as reflected in the language of the law itself. We must give the words of the MMMA their ordinary and plain meaning as would have been understood by the electorate.
The court reiterated that the MMMA does not legalize marijuana outright, but that it's "protections are limited to individuals suffering from serious or debilitating medical conditions or symptoms."