[why food deserts abound] Surprise! Everyone hates broccoli

food deserts abound because people hate broccoli
Why food deserts abound. Surprise!

 Why food deserts abound. Surprise! Everyone hates broccoli!

 In inner cities and poor rural areas across the country, public health advocates have been working hard. Why?  to To turn around food deserts – neighborhoods where fresh produce is scarce, and greasy fast food abounds.

In many cases, they’re converting dingy, cramped corner markets into lighter, brighter stores.  that offer fresh fruits and vegetables.

In some cases, they’re building brand new stores.

To change inner city food habits they built stores that were attractive. 

“The presumption is, if you build a store, people are going to come,” says Stephen Matthews, professor in the departments of sociology, anthropology and demography at Penn State University.

To check that notion, he and colleagues from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine recently surveyed residents of one low-income community in Philadelphia before and after the opening of a glistening new supermarket brimming with fresh produce.

What people actually eat:

 What they’re finding, Matthews says, is a bit surprising: “We don’t find any difference at all. … We see no effect of the store on fruit and vegetable consumption.”

Surprise!  Everyone hates broccoli.

http://www.npr.org/blogs/thesalt/2014/02/10/273046077/takes-more-than-a-produce-aisle-to-refresh-a-food-desert

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Firenze Sage, Esq.  As usual,  the Obamas are wrong.

http://www.smashwords.com/books/search?query=four+more+obama+years

 

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http://www.dailyfinance.com/2012/04/04/food-deserts-where-have-all-the-inner-city-grocery-stores-gone/

Food Deserts: Where Have All the Inner-City Grocery Stores Gone?

by Jeremy Bowman  Apr 4th 2012 6:00AM

City grocery storesChicago entrepreneur Karriem Beyah grew up working in the grocery business, but when he courted some industry heavyweights to bring stores to the South Side, their response was disdainful: “Who wants to go over there, in that negative element?”

 

 

 

 

 

 

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parents manipulate process for autism services hoisted on their petard?

 

 

educator/parents manipulate process seeking services
parents manipulate process for autism services

Parents manipulate  process for  autism services hoisted  on their own petard?

Here’s a list of  what NOT to do when seeking services for a child with substantial delays such as autism or intellectual disability.

And if you do the following  – don’t expect the process to go smoothly!

That the parents are both teacher/ educators which is a profession prone to “know it all” types may have  played  a role in what happened and that these parents today  are still clueless.

The family  first went to  an  M.D.  who made recommendations that a handful of evaluations be done & then  to come back to discuss the results.  The parents  did not follow through on any of the MD’s  recommendations concerning assessment.

Instead, the parents went to a CA  agency that provides services to children with developmental disabilities.  There, the parents:

  • Told  the agency  exactly  what diagnosis to give their child.   And what diagnosis was not acceptable.
  • Spent most of the  first interview  saying NO when asked for additional info/ records.
  • Refused permission for the agency  to  observe the  child  with same age peers at school.
  • Created  a  pseudo history of  events via email trail.
  •  Provided false information  because their advocate told them to do so.

Overall, these parents/ educators  tried to manipulate the  process from start to finish.  What happened?

Hoist by they own petard!  One thing lead to another and the end result was that the parents did not get the diagnosis they expected.  So they they tried to change the diagnosis through a complaint process. And that did not work.

The parents feel “stuck” with a diagnosis they do not agree with. Shown the support for the diagnosis they still want to reject it. And the parents state that they feel that the process was a painful one.  Well, the actions they took (see above bullets) resulted in effects they did not expect.

It is hard for parents to accept that their child not only meets criteria for autism but also for intellectual disability.

What about the child?  The 13 year old substantially delayed child still does not have an Individual Education Plan (IEP). The parents, both educators, say that they don’t want their child  harmed through special education  categorization or certain medical  diagnosis which they don’t accept.

In my view, just as water seeks its own level, many children with disabilities are more comfortable educated with children who share similar  abilities.  I hope that this child does get an IEP and can have connections with children who share similar abilities and interests.

 

http://http://www.autismsupportnetwork.com/news/category/parents-and-friendsaut.sagepub.com/content/3/3/273.abstract

Cameron Jackson, Ph.D.    DrCameronJackson@gmail.com

Dr Jackson is a psychologist with a private practice in Santa Cruz, CA   831 688 6002

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How to celebrate milestones of children with developmental delays?

 

How to celebrate milestones of children with developmental delays?

Children with developmental delays frequently do not graduate from high school.

One private school in Santa Cruz, CA which serves largely children with autism is the Bay School.  Per report by a parent, there is no graduation ceremony at the Bay School  when students finish their Senior year. 

So, what to do if a student with developmental delays wants to celebrate completion of high school but there is no ceremony or ritual?

Clearly, here’s an opportunity to innovate.  

innovate & make a ceremoney
innovate & make a meaningful ceremony for children with developmental delays

Make up a ceremony that will be meaningful for your child with delays. Each child is unique so the best person to decide are the parents and family and friends who support this young person leaving high school behind. 

Do you know a child with developmental delays? Find out their birthday and the date that they will formally  finish their Senior year.

Send a card and/or a small gift. Make a phone call. And you might include a fresh flower or two for the parent(s) who has taken this long journey with their child soon to be a grown up.  Below is a post by an MD on the same topic. 

licensed psychologist DrCameronJackson@gmail.com

http://blogs.einstein.yu.edu/celebrating-milestones-for-the-developmentally-disabled/

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What are probable causes of autism? Vaccines?

What are probable causes of autism in babies? Vaccines?

Defer vaccinations for some children ages 18 to 24 mo?
Defer vaccinations for some babies  ages 18 to 24 mo?

What are probable causes of autism in babies? Vaccines?   Research says mercury in vaccines does not cause autism because there’s no more mercury in the vaccines. That’s the beginning of the story …

But maybe the vaccines themselves overwhelm some babies who genetically are more likely to develop it than others.

What to do? Talk to your MD about a delayed schedule for vaccinations.  A particularly vulnerable window seems to be the 18 – 24 month period. Why not defer vaccinations if certain conditions exist.   drcameronjackson@gmail.com

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Research Reaffirms: No Vaccine-Autism Link

Jan. 7, 2008

By AUDREY GRAYSON

A new study may be the latest nail in the coffin of a theory that draws a link between the mercury-containing vaccine additive thimerosal and autism.

The research is the latest to contradict concerns over childhood vaccinations as a possible cause of autism — concerns that have gained publicity in the past decade as the number of children diagnosed with the disorder climbs steadily in the United States.

Because vaccinations are mandatory for all children at a certain age, some parents and doctors believe that the mercury once found in many childhood vaccines may contribute to the development of autism. However, so far a number of large scientific studies have shown no association between thimerosal and autism.

And the most recent research to nullify this association, published Monday in the journal Archives of General Psychiatry, reveals that the prevalence of autism for children ages 3 to 12 continued to increase in California even after 2001 — when all but trace levels of mercury had been removed from most childhood vaccines.

“If thimerosal exposure is a primary cause of autism, then the prevalence of autism would be predicted to decrease, as young children’s exposure to thimerosal has sharply decreased to its lowest levels in decades,” noted lead study investigator Robert Schechter in the commentary section of the research.

Much Ado About an Additive

Before 2001, thimerosal was used in many childhood vaccines to prevent microbial contamination. However, in July 1999, the U.S. Public Health Service implemented a precautionary measure removing thimerosal — which contains 49.6 percent ethylmercury — from all childhood vaccines.

To determine whether reduced exposure to thimerosal led to a decrease in autism cases, researchers at the California Department of Public Health analyzed data from the California Department of Developmental Services on the prevalence by age and birth cohort of children with autism between 1995 and 2007.

But instead of finding a decrease in autism following the elimination of thimerosal from most vaccines, researchers found that for each quarter from 1995 to the end of 2003, the prevalence of autism in children between the ages of 3 and 5 years increased from 0.6 to 2.9 per 1,000 births.

http://abcnews.go.com/Health/story?id=4099059&page=1

http://abcnews.go.com/Health/story?id=4099059&page=1

From 2004 to 2007, when exposure to thimerosal from childhood vaccinations vastly declined, the prevalence of autism in children between the ages of 3 and 5 years increased from 3.0 to 4.1 per 1,000 births.

The findings bolster the position that has been steadfastly held by the Institute of Medicine, and many doctors worldwide, that no link can be established between thimerosal and autism.

Some researchers say that the absence of a link has already been demonstrated in Denmark, where thimerosal was removed from all vaccines in 1992. Despite this move, autism rates in that country continued to rise until 2004.

“Conspiracy theorists will continue to engage this theory on the link between autism and vaccinations, but hopefully, they will take into account that this idea has been refuted on an international scale, not just by the CDC,” said Mark Slifka, associate professor in the Vaccine and Gene Therapy Institute at Oregon Health Sciences University.

“Studies out of Sweden and Denmark, independent studies on an international basis, have all come to this same conclusion.”

http://abcnews.go.com/Health/story?id=4099059&page=1

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Autism: what parents can do early on

Keep a notebook and date when your baby does ...
Keep a notebook and date when your baby does …

Keep a notebook. For example,

Date the first social smile by baby and the following events.

Date  baby's first social smile. What age?
Date baby’s first social smile. What age?

When did the child first reach up his/her arms signaling non-verbally that the child wanted to be picked up.

Does the child turn her head when their name is called.

Will the child engage in joint play, looking at the object and also at the parent?

When you as parent point, will the child’s eyes follow what you are pointing at?

Will your child show interest in other children?  For example, if you go to a park with a couple pails and some spoons or shovels will  your child show interest in other children who also want to play “scoop” the sand into a pail?

Unlike many medical diagnosis which depend on blood and other tests, there are no  physical tests for autism. And because the worst aspects of autism are social deficits the child if at all possible be seen with other  same age children.

Cameron Jackson, Ph.D.   DrCameronJackson@gmail.com

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It’s time primary care doctors diagnose autism says pediatrician Somsak

 | CONDITIONS | AUGUST 1, 2013

I remember how my son’s autism diagnosis was delivered.  He was three years old.  It wasn’t a surprise really, merely a confirmation of something that I expected and feared.  He was already enrolled in speech and occupational therapy making very little progress.  He saw a developmental specialist at age two and two and half who initially believed that he was not autistic but merely delayed with sensory issues.  After we requested a more formal evaluation for autism, she referred us to the “autism specialist” in her division. 

The diagnosis was “officially” given after four appointments with various “specialists” at a Children’s Hospital.  Initially my husband and I met with a psychologist who took a detailed history.  A week later we returned with our son, so the psychologist could directly observe and assess him.  He mostly screamed.  At our third appointment a trained speech therapist administered the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule (ADOS), one of the few standardized tools that help physicians and psychologists diagnose autism.  Finally the fourth appointment we met with an “autism specialist” who summarized the results and confirmed his autism.  We were offered follow up in a year with either the autism specialist or her nurse practitioner.  We already had a firm plan for future therapy and education.  All we needed was a physician to sign off on the state autism scholarship form so that we could receive funding for him to attend a specialized school.  Fortunately, our health insurance paid for most of this diagnostic process, this bureaucratic, non-transparent, not especially helpful process.

By the time a child is three years old, he has had about 10 visits with his primary care doctor.  The doctor likely knows the family and the child very well.  If developmental screening revealed a delay or concern for autism (pediatricians generally screen for autism with the MCHAT at 18 and 24 months), the child has already been referred to early intervention and might be receiving additional private therapies.  The primary care provider has received the results of at least some of these evaluations and visits.  Depending on the state where the doctor practices, the early intervention team may have performed an ADOS and sent the result to the physician.

The American Academy of Pediatrics 2007 policy statement Identification and Evaluation of Children with Autism Spectrum Disorders states “pediatricians must be aware of local resources that can assist in making a definitive diagnosis of, and in managing, autism spectrum disorders,” but it stops short of saying that pediatricians are the doctors that can and should make that diagnosis.  The waiting list to see a specialist can be over year depending on where the child lives.

Furthermore, many specialists do not make a diagnosis at the initial visit forcing the family to wait even longer.  Even if a diagnosis is made, the specialist does not assume the care for the child the way an oncologist would for leukemia, a gastroenterologist would for Crohn’s disease, a psychiatrist would for bipolar disorder, a pulmonologist would for cystic fibrosis, an endocrinologist would for a new onset diabetes, you get the idea.  The situation differs from that of almost every other chronic disorder, yet we know that the care of autistic children is just as complex and crucial as the other disorders mentioned.  When no doctor steps up, mothers become frustrated warriors some advocating tirelessly for evidence based therapies, others work to green vaccines and cleanse diets while most do the daily mundane heroic acts of mothering a special needs child.

Primary care providers by default end up heading the autism team.  Shouldn’t they make the diagnosis?  Do they have the time?  If we can make time for depression and complicated ADHD, we can fit an autism diagnosis into our day.  Do primary care providers have the knowledge to make a diagnosis?  Autism centers have become the “experts” in diagnosis which creates a catch 22 because these centers cannot meet demand.  Despite this, they are not reaching out to empower primary care doctors to make the diagnosis nor do they accept the diagnosis given by a different ivory tower.

A recent study conducted by Vanderbilt University with the help of the Tennessee AAP Chapter demonstrated that after a two day training, local pediatricians felt comfortable making the diagnosis of autism and agreed with specialist diagnosis 90% of the time.  Similar trainings are underway in Ohio.  I completed this training and found it helpful.  Ohio has such a back log of children who need a doctor to evaluate children with possible autism, they are trying to recruit general pediatricians to see children outside their own patient practice.  This training should be online, standardized and offered by the national AAP as an Maintenance Of Certification activity and specialists should embrace it.

Denise A. Somsak is a pediatrician.

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Obama’s U.S. ambassadors: the state dept follies

 Obama’s U.S. ambassadors: 
  • Noah Mamet bundled at least $1 million in campaign donations to President Obama’s two presidential election campaigns, and now he’s in line to be the U.S. ambassador to Argentina, 
  • Last month the Obama nominee for a similar post in Norway demonstrated a lack of knowledge about that nation’s political structure and said he had never been there
  • Newly minted ambassador Max Baucus, now headed to Beijing, freely admitted in his own hearing that he’s ‘no real expert on China’
  • The new ambassador to Hungary is a soap opera producer and prolific Democratic fundraiser who couldn’t tell senators what America’s strategic interests are in that country.
  • ———————————————————————
  • And they [our new U.S. ambassadors]  are now all led by the incomparable John Kerry who may [we hope] be smart enough to keep them alive [not like Bengazi where Stevens and 3 others died]. 
 t
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[USA athletes in Russia should get] gold medals for escape awarded

USA athletes  in Russia (a male)  break down bathroom door and another athlete (a female) does  not to to step into an open elevator  shaft.

USA athlete in Russia breaks down bathroom door to escape
USA athlete in Russia breaks down bathroom door to escape

After U.S. bobsledder Johnny Quinn realized he was trapped inside his hotel bathroom this weekend, the 30-year-old Olympian broke down the door. Quinn, who was phoneless post-shower, pummeled through the pseudo-wood to escape that small, steamy space — and tweeted the aftermath to the world.

http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1953210-american-bobsledder-johnny-quinn-breaks-out-of-bathroom-in-sochi

Elevator shaft escape:

 

British bobsledder Rebekah Wilson was greeted with an empty elevator shaft when she attempted to leave her room in the Olympic Village on Saturday morning.

She later said she hit the down button, the doors opened, and there was nothing there.

 

http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/olympics/wp/2014/02/08/bobsledder-has-scare-with-open-elevator-shaft/

________________________________________

Firenze Sage, Esq.
Not to worry. The whole country [Russia]  is a 3d world mess with Atomic bombs.

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Night stand defense: Don’t forget this one ladies

night stand defense
night stand defense

Night stand defense for ladies:    A woman was acquitted of driving drunk in San Francisco’s South of Market neighborhood.

 She had been fleeing from an abusive boyfriend at the time of her arrest, the city public defender’s office said.

 A jury found Marlise Paulo, 25, not guilty Wednesday of driving under the influence and driving with a .08 blood alcohol level or above, both misdemeanors, in connection with an incident on Sept. 8.

Paulo, an Oroville resident (Butte County), had been visiting San Francisco with her boyfriend to attend a 49ers game and celebrate the boyfriend’s birthday, said her attorney, Deputy Public Defender Abe Abed.

They left the car near their hotel at Sixth and Minna streets to go out drinking.

The couple went to  the Crazy Horse Gentlemen’s Club on Market Street  crazy horse  where the boyfriend was ejected when he would not stop spitting chewing tobacco on the floor.

Outside the strip club, he grew belligerent at Paulo. He accused  her of taking the bouncers’ side, Abed said.

She left him and went back to the hotel, where she fell asleep.

When her boyfriend returned, he attacked her, throwing her into a night stand, Abed said.

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Firenze Sage:   Defense attorneys have a new ploy.

http://blog.sfgate.com/crime/2014/01/31/woman-fleeing-boyfriend-not-guilty-of-dui/ http://blogs.dallasobserver.com/unfairpark/2013/11/jury_tosses_arlington_dui_char.php

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Emergency Room Nurse Experiences Mayo Man

ER visit by Mayo man for toe pain Written by a former highway patrolman, now   an RN.  skotcoz@hotmail.com

E.R. room
Mayo man visits ER for toe pain & refuses to leave ER room.

“One night in the ER, I just took over as charge nurse when one of my younger, female RN’s approached me for some help.

ER client refuses to leave room
ER client refuses to leave room

She was having some difficulty discharging one of her clients.

She had given the client his discharge paperwork and nearly 20 minutes passed with the client remaining in the ER room.

When she went in to check on him, he told her to “fuck off!” and in essence, said he’d leave when he was ready.

This was late swing shift, very busy, with a lobby full of sick folks who needed rooms.

I view most of my younger female RN’s as  my little sisters, so I decided this particular ER client needed to have a personal visit from me. As I announced my presence and began to move into the room around the closed curtain, I was met with multiple obscenities launched in my general direction.

He  accused me  of trying to get a peek at the client while in an undressed state. I found it humorous because he was fully dressed minus one shoe. shoe

 

 

The thing that struck me as a bit funnier was he had paused in this state of dress  (minus one shoe) to make a sandwich.

MAYO SANDWITCH
sandwich  made in ER  room by Mayo man before departing hospital

 

 

He emptied his backpack onto the exam stretcher which included a loaf of bread, mayo, and cheese.

When I advised him that I didn’t appreciate his candor with my nurse, he cursed at me, told me to get out of his room. He actually ran across the room and pushed my chest with both hands. I didn’t react at first because he really surprised me, and he actually bounced off me. He was kind of methish, about 5′ 9″ and weighed about a buck fifty.

 

I’m six feet tall and weigh in at about 200.

male R.N, 6 feet, 200 pounds of muscle on duty
RN, 6 feet, 200 pounds of muscle,  tells Mayo man to leave ER & hit the road.

That being said, the physical contact pissed me off a bit and I warned him against a second attack and what would probably happen to him if he touched me again. Some staff had witnessed the interaction and called security.

Security  arrived and stood behind me as we watched him install that last shoe. I told him to pack up his food and hit the road.

As he was loading his backpack, the verbal onslaught continued. When he finally finished, he tried walking past the group of us patiently waiting for him. I calmly raised a hand to stop him, which he walked right into. He told me he needed to get by me so he could get his bike outside of the lobby. The security guards and I advised him he was leaving by the closest exit, which was the ambulance bay doors about 20 feet away. He protested a bit, but with direction from security he finally left and took the long way around to get his bike.

 On the way out, he found it necessary to shown me some crude gang tattoos. 

Mayo man's gang tatoos
Example of  gang tattoos

 

He assumed we would all accept them as threats. My guess is that they may have been real but any gang probably found that this guy was too bat shit crazy to hang with anymore.

This incident is not the weirdest thing to ever happen, just a small picture of  daily life in the ER.

 

what happens in the er

More stories to come.

If anyone was wondering, without giving any confidential information away, Mayo man  was seen for a very minor complaint resembling the acuity of toe pain.  

P.S. You all  paid for his ER visit.”

 skotcoz@hotmail.com

The author is a former highway patrolman who now is an RN.

Other relevant posts include: 

http://www.kevinmd.com/blog/2014/01/medicaid-patients-emergency-department-primary-care.html

http://www.smartplanet.com/blog/smart-takes/unnecessary-trips-to-hospital-er-cost-44-billion-study-finds/10504

http://health.howstuffworks.com/medicine/5-unusual-er-visits.htm

 

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Questions for Obama on SuperBowl Sunday

Questions for  Obama tomorrow  on SuperBowl Sunday when O’Reilly interviews the President:

Obama promises American they can keep their health care plans
Obama promises American they can keep their health care plans

Health care: Mr. President,will you keep your promise  that if  you like your health plan you can keep it,, by working   with Congress  to pass laws which  repeal : 1)  the individual and employer mandates; 2) repeal  the exchanges and 3)  repeal the central planning  of 1/6th of our economy (health care)  which  results in the  overpricing of health plan products?

War powers: Mr. President, as Commander-in-Chief you have power  and the responsibility to send planes and troops to protect America.  Where were you the night of Bengazi when Ambassador Stevens, 2 CIA operatives and a 4th American were murdered? Had you sent an armed  drone to keep the mob away and had you provided adequate protection for the Embassy  those four would be alive today some say.   Exactly where were you and who did you speak with during those hours and that evening?

Where was Obama the night Stevens was murdered at Bengazi?
Where was Obama the night Ambassador  Stevens was murdered at Bengazi?

 

Jobs: Mr. President, you’ve admitted that the Stimulus resulted in no shovel ready jobs. The Pipeline will result in 45,000 shovel ready and other jobs. Yes/No, are you going to support the Pipeline?  

Education:  Mr. President,  in the past  you  opposed vouchers which give low income and minority children choice as to which  school they will attend. Twice you denied  vouchers to 4000 Afro-American  children in Washingto D.C  where your children attend a private school.  Why not give low income, minority parents the same choice that you have to send their child to a school of their choice?

Obama opposes vouchers for D.C. black children
Obama opposes vouchers for D.C. black children

Poverty:  Mr. President, the way out of poverty is to stay in school, get married and have children in that order. You followed that path. Will you work to change laws to encourage staying in school, marriage and having children after marriage?

America is waiting for your reply, Mr. President.

Cameron S. Jackson, Ph.D.

drcameronjackson@gmail.com

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