I must have posted this video several dozen times already, usually associated with his propensity for gaffes:
Saturday, September 28, 2013
Obama banning medical devices he can"t pronounce (asthma inhalers banned over "environmental concerns")
Asthma Awareness
Smoking and Asthma
Smoking is bad news for everyone, but especially for kids who have asthma. And yet between 15 and 20 percent of people with asthma still indulge in the habit, even though it makes them wheezier. Pregnant women who smoke increase the risk of the baby being asthmatic and having other respiratory illness. Tobacco smoke contains 4,000 chemicals, present either as gases or tiny particles. Keep your home smoke free. Remove all ashtrays and should a guest ask for one, explain that it is necessary to keep your home unpolluted, and suggest they smoke outside. Offer them a nicotine patch if they do not want to go out. It is important to have fresh air circulating throughout your home but beware of room fresheners as they also can be triggers. Open a window back and front of your home for a little while twice a day. Children are much more sensitive to cigarette pollution than adults. Seek out practical information on how to protect them against asthma using new and innovative methods. Look up a website with an alternative solution about how to cure asthma the natural way.
You do not have to smoke yourself to inhale the fumes. Every time you walk into a bar you will get a blast of tobacco and if your asthma is severe you should avoid such places. Other people’s smoking habits can make your life a misery and if you live or work with a smoker there is little or no escape from smoke related risks.Children of smokers are more likely to have wheezy episodes and time off school than those with non smoking parents. It is generally worse when the mother smokes because many children spend more time with their mother than their father.
violations of civil rights page 16 Appeal to Federal Blue Cross/Blue Shield of ILLINOIS,TX,OK, NM
Attached are a recap summary of all claims back to 8/1/00 which are currently appealed or are new items received not paid correctly. All claims need to be referred first to federal workers compensation and your contact should be the regional office manager in Dallas, TX, not the non- compliantcontractor as to how this can be facilitated. New actions since your last, inaccurate decisions based on false and incomplete information. Remember you are alleging OPM’ past director gave you one set of ‘ facts’ and ACS, the paper controller and claims processor for US dept of labor, claims they were told an opposite set of ‘facts’ by that same director. Trailblazers has been non cooperative with judges, etc. but Cigna Govt services did cooperate and the only Final decision was issued by Medicare’s appellate judge on 9/29/2010 was based on the internal documents that were withheld from you, even from the officials at OPM? , by that director. Federal workers comp gets claims first. Then you and last would be Medicare for any co- pays or deductibles on medical issues not yet reviewed or accepted yet. All conditions accepted or filed on 1/10/89 injury . HIPPAA reqeust for written recap of who said what, when to solve. not yet answered.
Strategies to Control Asthma
This summary from the NHLBI provides invaluable information to parents of children with asthma. Â SS
World Asthma Day and Asthma Awareness Month
Together we can help control asthma.
Use inhaled corticosteroids to control asthma if you have persistent asthma. Your doctor will help you choose the best treatment.
Use a written asthma action plan to highlight two things: 1) what to do daily to control your asthma, and 2) how to handle symptoms or asthma attacks.
Assess asthma severity at the initial visit to determine what treatment to start to get your asthma under control.
Assess and monitor how well controlled your asthma isat follow up visits. Your doctor may need to increase, or decrease your medicine to keep asthma under control.
Schedule follow-up visits at periodic intervals, and at least every six months.
Control environmental exposures such as allergens or irritants that worsen your asthma.
Is it Walking Pneumonia? Bronchitis? Or Asthma?
Sweet Baby Tate has had a cough for weeks now, at least 4. Â It was a dry cough at first, and I was doing much the same thing. Â It always felt like I had a frog in my throat that needed clearing. Â I just thought we were both suffering from allergies. Â The weather here unpredictable at best, with rain and wind blowing all the pollen and mold etc about all the time, 30 degrees one day and seriously 83 degrees the next. Â As last year it never froze or truly got cold none of the spores died. Â So now double the crap is flying about in the air. Â People are miserable.
In any event, I just thought we were suffering from allergies. Â While we were in Dallas in early January I was on a Z-pac that I requested from my friend as I felt like I had a sinus infection (Note to self who is a pediatric dentist, don’t ask S for a specific antibiotic for something of which you know nothing about; let her choose as apparently a Z-pac is not the drug of choice for a sinus infection. Â But I digress. Â Are you reading this S?). Â I just felt a little gunky and had that strange yucky taste in my throat and was congested. Â I suppose it helped as I never got a fever and I felt better a couple of days after we returned. Â I mostly didn’t want to get my girl J sick who was possibly going to need to start chemo soon after the weekend (Sadly she got bad news and has finished one round. I’m so sad for her, but I’m positive she’s going to be cured!)
Then Tate started coughing;  the dry cough.  It was  sort of constant, but never seemed to bother him and it would be one hack and then 10 or 15 minutes later another hack.  Nothing concerning though.  He just seemed to always need to clear his throat.  H also had one fantastic screaming fit and became hoarse about 3 1/2 weeks ago.  But the hoarseness has never gone away.  Again I just thought well maybe it was coincidental to the screaming fit, and his little voice was going to be changing.  Now of course when I hear him I can barely remember what he used to sound like, so I’m wondering if there has actually been a change.
However, for about a week and a half now I’ve been given him an anti-histamine at night, usually Benadryl, approved by our allergist, for the cough. Â It alleviated the cough and his sniffling while Zyrtec does not. Â I’ve been keeping him on his Singulair now almost constantly since September where as last year he got a break November – March. Â (I hate him constantly being on medications). Â But when he goes off he tends to get a bit of a dry cough (ahhhh…asthma warnings right?. Â Sigh)
But then this past Monday his teacher texted me twice saying he had been coughing all day long, so much so that he wasn’t able to nap.  He was doing fine, but poor baby had red eyes and looked so tired.  She asked if she could put a small piece of peppermint in some cold water to have him sip to help soothe his throat.  I gave my blessing of course.  He finally fell asleep after everyone else woke up, and she let him sleep an hour while keeping the other 4 kids sort of quiet, so he could rest (I love her!).  That night Tate told me “Ms. JoAnnie gave me some peppermint water, and it made my throat feel ‘bedder’.  I’m going to give her a little hug tomorrow.”  Not a big hug mind you, a little hug
Monday when I picked him up his cough was very wet and productive sounding and he coughed constantly. Â I loaded him up with Benadryl and Singulair and he happily played as usual and went to bed just fine. Â Yesterday, Tuesday, I called and made an appointment with his pediatrician for today.
My parents, who are AWESOME!, picked him up from school this morning and took him to his appointment. Â I wrote the following note for them to give to his pediatrician…
Dr. R….
When you’re ‘sick’ (his ped said he could return to daycare!) Mommy lets you have a hot dog AND hot cocoa in your Polar Express cup for dinner! |
Healthy food for fussy eaters
Children drown silently, in mere minutes. Despite the best efforts of parents and caregivers to keep their children safe, drowning remains one of major causes of child death in Australia.Â
Play is a vital part of child development and while safer than ever before, as parents we should remain vigilant about hidden hazards posed by toys on store shelves.
So what can we do to keep little ones safe at play? Useful points to consider include what to look for when buying toys, understanding safety marks and labelling, ensure that the right safety checks have been carried out, and considerations when giving and receiving used toys.
Whoever coined the phrase, “sleep like a baby” must not have been a parent. As all exhausted parents will tell you, babies tend to sleep sporadically, at best. One night, your baby may sleep all the way through, but the next may have you getting up three or four times. After several months, most babies do settle into a predictable sleep pattern, and there are a number of things that parents can do to help their babies get the idea that nighttime is for sleeping.
Asthma
- Researchers found an association between asthma and use of pesticides by male farmers. (Senthilselvan et al, 1992) Although this study involved adults, it raises concerns about children’s exposures to pesticides used in the home or residues brought home on parents’ clothes or equipment.
Birth Defects
- The commonly used pesticide, chlorpyrifos (brand name Dursban) caused severe birth defects in four children exposed in utero. Chlorpyrifos is used widely as an agricultural chemical, but is also the most common pesticide used indoors to kill termites, fleas, roaches and in pest control strips. (Sherman, JD. 1996 Chlorpyrifos (Dursban)-associated birth defects: report of four cases. Arch. Env .Health 51(1): 5-8)
Teenage Smoking can be Reduced wtih Anti-Smoking Programs
Programs to reduce teenage smoking can be successful. A recent report for the Health and Wellness Trust Fund showed the percentage of middle-school students who smoke dropped from 5.8% in 2005 to 4.5% in 2007 in North Carolina. Their Trust Fund’s budget for anti-smoking programs is $ 17.1 million. This contrasts very sharply and very disappointingly with its neighbor, South Carolina (SC). For 2009, SC has budgeted NO money from its payments from the 1998 national settlement with tobacco companies. SC has budgeted $ 1 million on anti-smoking programs, but the source of these funds is the federal government.
More resources to help people stop smoking can be found at Smoke Free Homes. Note, the programs are free.
Friday, September 27, 2013
Why is my child coughing so long!
Some of you who know me pretty well know that our family has been put the the ringer the last few months with sickness. Â It all started with my daughter Hannah who had a wet cough or phlegmy cough that started way back in July. Â I took her to the pediatrician multiple times who said it was allergies or a virus. Â She continued to cough everyday all day. Â I knew it wasn’t allergies. Â My husband, mother and son all have allergies, and they have never coughed everyday for months because of allergies. Â I finally decided if the pediatrician wasn’t going to do anything that I would take her to an allergist to prove that it wasn’t allergies. Â The allergist tested her for allergies, turns out she is mildly allergic to trees but that wasn’t what was causing the coughing. Â The allergist determined Hannah had a sinus infection, that went undiagnosed for 5 months. Â After a round or antibiotic and steroids the cough finally ended.
The 3 most common causes of a cough that lasts 6 weeks or longer are postnasal drip (most commonly from allergies), asthma and gastroesophageal reflux (stomach acid coming up to the vocal cords and making him cough)–in that order. Often the history or exam guides you. For instance if there is wheezing, asthma is the likely candidate. If the lungs are clear but there is alot of snot, postnasal drip.Â
The typical approach is a trial of treatment for the most likely culprit. Albuterol sometimes is helpful if you give it and you notice that for the next couple hours he coughs or wheezes less. It doesn’t do anything to make him get better faster but it does make him breath easier and wheeze and cough less until his body heals. If he is not getting better within a week or two, you can try oral steroids for 5 days or a steroid inhaler which gives the same medicine right to the longs but takes longer to work (maybe a month). Somewhere along the way a chest xray is good to get to make sure there is not a pneumonia or something unusual that might show up on xray.
For both asthma and postnasal drip from allergies, avoiding common allergens can be helpful. The most common ones are cats/hamsters, dust mites (cover mattress and wash sheets in hot water weekly) and pollen or mold.
My friend who is a doctor sent me this information. Â I thought it might be helpful to someone.
My report on the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology"s 2011 meeting
I attended the AAAAI’s (for short!) 2011 meeting in March. I thought this was a productive meeting for me. This is an international meeting of allergists from around the world.
The general plenary sessions were interesting. (photo 1). Some of the interesting topics: nanotechnology, asthma, studies on sublingual (under-the tongue) immunotherapy, safety of long-acting bronchodilating agents, food allergy, mold exposure.
Incidentally, while in California, I visited the Ira F. Brilliant Center for Beethoven Studies, in the San Jose Public Library. An ultra-fast visit is here and here. You can see Beethoven’s hair. A sample was used to discover that high lead levels probably contributed to his death.
The next weekend, I attended the Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology Society of South Carolina’s annual meeting. This was a smaller scale meeting of allergists from South Carolina with 4 nationally known speakers. The topics included immunodeficiencies, EMR, drug allergies, food allergies, and occupational asthma. The above comments apply here also. Both meetings were intellectually stimulating and I think they will benefit my patients.
Medical Question: Pneumonia
Elaine asks: You’ve come highly recommended by quite a few author-friends and I’m hoping you can help me out with a medical question for my story.
I have a high school senior who comes down with a severe case of pneumonia weeks before her graduation. She is hospitalized in the ICU, pulls through, but doesn’t make it to graduation.
Plot wise I need her to miss the fall semester of beginning college & have her family keeping her home during the summer for extra rest while she recuperates more fully. I’d like to know if this scenario is feasible– that a case of pneumonia, if bad enough, could weaken someone enough that she’d postpone starting school in the fall and take it up again in the spring?
Jordyn says: Elaineâthanks so much for sending me your question. And thanks for the compliment! That means a lot to me.
My suggestion would be this– give this character a chronic illness that puts her lungs in a more vulnerable state (broncho-pulmonary dysplasia, asthma, cystic fibrosis) and the pneumonia got to the point where she had to be admitted to the ICU on a ventilator and she blew a lung which complicated her situation. Considering her history of chronic diseaseâit would be more feasible that she’d have a long recovery time and she’d take the fall semester off.
Asthmatics on the ventilator are very hard to manage and get off and often have a complicated course. Most often, they have to be medically paralyzed and sedated. The patient is high risk for developing a pneumothorax. This would be my pick.
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She and her husband make their home in an 1851 Rutland Railroad Station they painfully but lovingly restored.
That Coughing Cat, Part Two: Feline Heartworm Disease, by Dr. Laura Theobald
Heartworm disease is typically thought of as a disease affecting dogs, however cats can also be infected with heartworms. It is transmitted by mosquitoes and is reported in all of the continental United States.
Cats can show symptoms with as few as one to three adult heartworms living in the heart. These signs include coughing, difficulty breathing, vomiting, lethargy, anorexia (decreased appetite), and weight loss. There can also be acute episodes of shock and respiratory distress, as well as sudden death. On physical exam, there can sometimes be a heart murmur noted.
Diagnosis in cats is difficult when compared to dogs as the standard in-hospital testing (antigen test) that is used for dogs is not always accurate in cats. This is because cats tend to have only a few worms. A send-out test to the reference laboratory (antibody test) may be more useful, but a negative result still does not rule out heartworms. Other helpful diagnostics include radiographs (x-rays), echocardiogram (an ultrasound of the heart), complete blood count (CBC), internal organ function testing (chemistry), and fecal exam (to rule out parasites that can live in the lungs and cause coughing).
Prevention is the same as that used in dogs and includes monthly oral medications such as heartgard or trifexis, or topical solutions such as advantage multi or revolution. A six month injection called Proheart is available in dogs, but a similar product is not available in cats at this time.
Though dogs can undergo risky heartworm treatment (a series of two to three injections of a drug called immiticide to kill the heartworms in the span of a month or two), no such treatment is available in cats. Treatment is limited to monthly use of preventive medications to prevent further infestation and shorten the life of the heartworm. Supportive care includes bronchodilators to help pets breathe easier and steroids to reduce inflammation.
Written by Dr. Laura Theobald
Lap of Love Veterinary Hospice
Dr. Theobald works with Dr. Hawthorne helping families in the Charlotte North Carolina region. For more information – please see their profile page. http://www.lapoflove.com/North_Carolina_CharlotteÂ
Study Shows Asthma Medications Prevent Hospitalization When Used Properly
The ICU is one place you don’t want to be if you have asthma. Â Research shows that available medications for asthma are highly effective in reducing hospitalizations. Â SS
Inhaled Steroids Lead to Big Drop in Asthma Deaths at Texas Hospital: Study
They reduce inflammation in the lungs, improving control of asthma symptoms
Nasal sinus rinses with saline solution
Before we discuss using nasal sinus rinses with saline solution, I think it would better to review the anatomy and physiology of the nose and sinuses. I’m going to try something new, using Youtube videos that I have screened, and also not reinvent the wheel. The nose normally makes some mucus: to protect the mucosal lining from being too dry; to wash off particles, allergens, viruses, and bacteria off of the mucosal lining; and to protect the mucosal lining against infections. When the mucosal lining of the nose is irritated, we call this rhinitis. If the cause is from allergies, we call this allergic rhinitis. The sinuses are bony caves branching off from the nose. Here is a good review of sinusitis. This video says almost the same thing.
Saline solution introduced into the nose and sinus cavities will wash mucus and anything in the mucus off the mucosal lining. Here is a good video demonstrating nasal rinses on Youtube for an adult and another for a child. Some prefer to use the Netipot. Either work for me. Any product that works for you and is cost-effective is an acceptable product. It’s based on personal preference. In the top 3 photos to the right, I am demonstrating what I consider to be optimal technique: head down with chin above the eyes, saline solution being squeezed gently but persistently into the upper nostril, allowing the saline to drain out the lower nostril, mouth breathing. There is no downside when done gently. The three products (Nasaline, Ayr, NeilMed) in the bottom right photos were chosen simply because I had a sample in my office.
I am frequently asked about how much saline solution to use and how often. Mucus by its very nature is sticky, like syrup. So for the saline solution to effectively loosen the mucus up, it generally takes at least 8 ounces or 240 ml per session in my experience. I habitually rinse my nose and sinuses out at least four times per day. Why? I have several reasons. First, I am exposed on a daily weekday basis to many people. Rinsing is simply good hygiene. I have a family history of allergies, plus there’s my wife with very severe allergies, and I do not want my mucosal immune system to develop allergies, so I never let the allergens build up in my nose or sinuses. Think of it as constant spring pollen cleaning. Next, I find it refreshing, like splashing cool water on your face. Finally I am exposed to patient every weekday with respiratory infections. Some of them look pretty miserable. Some of the little twerps (or to be politically correct unhappy little children) cough or sneeze point blank right in my face as I try to examine them. Whatever they have, virus or allergy or bacteria, I DON’T WANT IT. So, once I have finished their office visit, I go straight over to the bathroom for handwashing + nasal sinus rinsing.
How much saline solution is safe to use? Remember what happens when you go swimming in either a pool or the ocean. Lots of water goes up your nose. Your nose and sinuses are getting washed out very thoroughly. Think about how your nose feels after a swim. Usually it is very clear for a few hours. Why? Your nose and sinuses have most of the mucus and anything in the mucus removed. Since mucus is produced normally, the clear feeling does not last forever.
I hope this discussion tells you how I feel about nasal sinus rinsing. As my friend Linus reminded me about Chicago voters each election, they vote early and vote often. Here I recommend rinse with lots of saline and rinse often.