Friday, September 5, 2014

FLOURIDE: JUST BECAUSE

OBAMACARE MEANS HIGHER COSTS

We've all heard about the rising cost of health care in recent years and many have experienced the effects in their daily lives. Well, the Wall Street Journal is calling attention to the problem with a piece in which a doctor-lawyer tells the story of a massive hospital bill that he received after taking his young son for a precautionary visit to the emergency room.

Here's a portion of the piece by Dr. Eric Michael David, co-founder and chief strategy officer of Organovo Inc., a biotech company in California.
As a doctor and a lawyer, I like to think I'm pretty good at navigating the health-care system. So when my wife and I found a large swollen bruise on our 3-year-old son's head more than a week after he had fallen off his scooter, I was confident we could get him a CT scan at a reasonable cost.
We live near one of the top pediatric emergency rooms in the country. The care was spectacular. My son was diagnosed with a small, 11-day-old bleed inside his head, which was healing, and insignificant.
I was proud to see the health-care system working, to see academic medicine working, and most of all to see my son run as fast as he could out of the ER two hours later.
Then the bill arrived, and you know where this is going: $20,000. Our insurance had already paid $17,000, and we owed $3,000 out-of-pocket. What for? Among the items listed on the printout was a $10,000 charge for a "trauma team activation." This made me want to give consumers some very simple tips on how to fight their health-care bills, so here goes:
1. Get yourself a job as a doctor or nurse. I've served on trauma teams in two of the busiest hospitals in New York City, and I know what a trauma-team activation looks like: doctors, nurses and residents running and yelling, IV lines, monitors. You know one when you see one. Nothing like that happened around my son. So I picked up the phone and told the hospital that the trauma charge was a mistake.
The billing agent explained that it was hospital protocol to call a trauma team when there is internal bleeding in a head injury. I argued, correctly, that it wasn't clinically indicated.
2. Have or gather the legal knowledge to know when you are being lied to. The hospital billing agent wasn't a physician and couldn't refute my clinical judgment, so she told me it was "county protocol" to call a trauma in such cases. This was a bluff, meant to get me off the phone by hiding behind regulations, a very effective tactic used by hospital administrators.
I called her bluff and said if she could show me the county regulation requiring a trauma team for an 11-day-old head injury, I'd happily pay my bill. She said she'd have the head of emergency services call me.

Stuart Varney reacted this morning on America's Newsroom, explaining that David - being a doctor himself - knew how to get through the "massive levels of bureaucracy" to have the $10,000 charge removed. The average American, however, may not have the same success.
He emphasized that the implementation of ObamaCare is not reducing the cost of health care and many of these stories will surface in the coming years. The Affordable Care Act also failed to reduce the bureaucracy and red tape involved in medical bills, he added.
Catch Varney & Co., weekdays at 11a ET on Fox Business Network.

How standing might be the best anti-ageing technique

Spending less time on the sofa lengthens 'telomeres' - the caps on chromosomes which protect the genetic code inside

telomere
A telomere, the highly repetetive end segment or terminator of a DNA chain that functions as a cap  Photo: Alamy



      

The best anti-ageing technique could be standing up, scientists believe, after discovering that spending more time on two feet protects DNA.


A study found that too much sitting down shortens telomeres, the protective caps which sit at the end of chromosomes.

Scientists found that the less time a person spent sitting, the longer their telomeres, and the greater their chance of living longer.

Short telomeres have been linked to premature aging, disease and early death. So spending less time on the sofa could help people live longer by preventing their DNA from aging.

The research found that people who were frequently on their feet had longer telomeres, which were keeping the genetic code safe from wear and tear.

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Intriguingly taking part in more exercise did not seem to have an impact on telomere length.

Prof Mai-Lis Hellenius, from Karolinska University Hospital in Stockholm, said : "In many countries formal exercise may be increasing, but at the same time people spend more time sitting.

"There is growing concern that not only low physical activity but probably also sitting and sedentary behaviour is an important and new health hazard of our time.

"We hypothesise that a reduction in sitting hours is of greater importance than an increase in exercise time for elderly risk individuals."

Telomeres stop chromosomes from fraying, clumping together and "scrambling" genetic code.

Scientists liken their function to the plastic tips on the ends of shoelaces, and say that lifespan is linked to their length.

Researchers looked at 49 overweight sedentary adults in their late sixties and measured the length of the telomeres in their blood cells.

Half of them had been part of an exercise program that lasted six months, while the other half had not.

Physical activity levels were assessed using a diary and pedometer to measure the amount of footsteps taken each day.

The amount of time spent sitting down was worked out through a questionnaire.

The study, published in the British Medical Journal, revealed that although people who did more exercise tended to be healthier, the most important factor was how much time they spent sitting down.

Scientists found that the less time a person spent sitting, the longer their telomeres, and the greater their chance of living longer.


The study was published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.

Monday, September 1, 2014



NEED GLASSES?  SEE GOGGLES4U.COM

A friend offered this from Goggles4u.com . . . 
 
Two months ago I discovered Goggles4u where you can purchase a pair of prescription eye glasses for $9.95 a pair.

I figured with prescription glasses for $9.95, there had to be a catch, but I decided to give it a try and ordered a pair.

When the glasses arrived, I was surprised that they were exactly as described. Quality lens, decent frames, and no surprises.

Since then, I've ordered several additional pairs - including prescription sunglasses, and progressives (distance at top, readers at bottom). And all the glasses have arrived as ordered.

Now that I have eight pair of new glasses from Goggles4u, my wife says I need to stop - she says I don't need anymore glasses.

But today, Goggles4u made me an offer I couldn't refuse. Buy one pair and get the second one free.

This BOGO offer includes everything from the $9.95 glasses all the way up to progressive sunglasses on designer frames. So I gave in and ordered two more pair (progessives and progressive sunglasses). Got both pair for $54.95 plus shipping. (My local eye doctor wanted $225.00 for one pair of progressives).

Here's what I've learned from my dealings with Goggles4U:

1. Order plastic frames. Not metal. Their metal frames are flimsy.
2. Order large frames (unless you have a narrow head)
3. Order frames with different color stems (so you can tell your glasses apart).
4. Order the anti-reflective coating (the extra $4.95 is worth it)
5. Always use the discount codes they provide
6. Expect the glasses to arrive about ten days after ordering.

If you visit today, you can get two pair for the price of one if you use the discount code GOBOGO

If you just want one pair, use the discount code GLASSES990 to get a pair for $9.90.

No, I'm not an affiliate, just like saving money on prescription glasses.

www.goggles4u.com

SURGERY CENTER OF OKLAHOMA

Here is the Surgery Center of Oklahoma's website. Those figures posted in the video are impressive.