Sunday, February 24, 2013

Academy Awards

I want to share a similarity to tonight's award show and quilting. I am sharing the sentiment from Penny Halgren, who is a Master Quilter (of course, I had to edit it to incorporate my own remarks).

The Stars in the movie world will be out tonight because it is Academy Awards night.
Last year when War Horse was nominated, there may have been some “chomping at the bit.”
This year, probably nail biting, hand-wringing, and breath-holding are more in order.

And when the evening is over, there will be jubilation as well as disappointment.

Yet everyone involved in making a movie – almost any movie – should be proud of the effort put forth, and the fact that the piece was finished and viewing it brought moments of pleasure to those who took the time to watch.

And so it is with quilts. Most quilters don’t enter their quilts into shows, or get nominated for some
kind of award.

Yet, we can all be proud of our finished quilts because they are an expression of our love of our craft, and – maybe more importantly – the love of the people we create them for. It brings us happiness knowing that our quilt will bring comfort and warmth to those we love and care about.

Whether we are creating a quilt to celebrate a life event, such as a wedding or birth, or creating a quilt simply for a loved one to enjoy, our quilts are a big hit.













Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Consumer Health Choices

At 9.00am Thursday, February 21, 2013 Consumer Reports will be with the ABIM Foundation and 17 medical specialty societies announcing 90 new things patients and physicians should question. Consumer Reports is proud to be leading the consumer communications coalition for Choosing Wisely and thanks all our partners for supporting us with tomorrow's launch. Stay tuned for many new resources that explain this work to patients.
 
 
 
 
 

Friday, February 8, 2013

Consumer Reports on Facebook's Privacy Settings

‎[CONSUMER ALERT] The "privately connected to my friends" wall post is back, and it's still a hoax! The only way to change post settings is through Facebook's built in Privacy Settings feature. Get the how-to from ConsumerReports here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HPqwJWm-0tI



Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Consumer Health Choices --Choosing Wisely

The new Choosing Wisely video went live today on the Consumer Health Choices YouTube Channel.

Check out the featured video here:

http://www.youtube.com/user/consumerhealthchoice

And available on Facebook page here:

http://www.facebook.com/ConsumerHealthChoices


This is the first of a proposed series of three videos to roll out in the near future. The next two will cover "more care is not necessarily better care" and "how to talk to your doctor about getting the right care".

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Meet my baby sister and her grand daughter

Laura
I know what my friends will think--no I didn't name my daughter after her. I didn't even know her name was Laura until yesterday! We have had no contact with each other for at least 30 years. We just connected on FB. Hopefully, we will start a relationship.

Consumer Reports Best Buy Drugs website

http://www.consumerreports.org/health/best-buy-drugs/index.htm

Just wanted to let you know that I am working once again on the Best Buy Drugs team. Check out the site.

Today is my mother-in-law's birthday

Happy Birthday Mom.
I hope the three of you are partying with the rest of the family in heaven. Including all our beloved dogs.

Cool side of science

Richard III's Skeleton Found in Parking Lot

by Kai Kupferschmidt on 4 February 2013, 12:25 PM

King's crown. This skull, excavated in a parking lot in Leicester, U.K., last summer, belonged to famous English king Richard III, according to new evidence presented today.

Credit: University of Leicester

Ending months of speculation, a team of scientists at the University of Leicester in the United Kingdom has concluded "beyond reasonable doubt" that human remains found in a parking lot in the city last year are those of Richard III, who reigned over England from 1483 until his death in 1485. Archaeologist Richard Buckley announced the findings at a press conference in Leicester this morning. The scientists on the panel hugged, and attending journalists whooped and clapped after the announcement.

Although local legend had it that the monarch's bones had been tipped into the river, some scientists were convinced it was still buried at a Franciscan monastery in Leicester. That monastery had been demolished in the 16th century, however, and researchers looking for Richard III found its remains below a modern-day parking lot last summer. Within days of discovering the church's walls, archaeologists dug up a skeleton in a small grave. A team of scientists then set to work trying to prove whether these were indeed Richard III's remains.

Close examination of the skeleton yielded some clues. It showed the individual was male, in his late 20s to late 30s, and had a feminine build, all of which squared with historical sources, osteoarchaeologist Jo Appleby of the University of Leicester said at the press conference. Richard III died at age 32 at the Battle of Bosworth Field. The battle ended the bloody civil war known as the "Wars of the Roses" as well as the Plantagenet line of kings, and established the House of Tudor as the new English dynasty.

The fighting left its marks on the body. The skeleton sports 10 wounds, eight on the skull and two on the rest of the body. Two of the wounds were particularly severe, a large hole at the back of the skull where a halberdlike weapon sliced off part of the head and a smaller trauma on the base of the skull caused by a blade that penetrated the skull. "Both of these injuries would have caused almost instant loss of consciousness, and death would have followed quickly afterwards," Appleby said. Other wounds are probably the result of postmortem mutilation.

To identify the skeleton, scientists also extracted DNA from the teeth and a thigh bone and compared it to DNA from two living relatives of the king. The DNA in mitochondria—small, energy-producing structures in a cell—is passed on only from the mother. Michael Ibsen, a furniture maker from Canada, had already been identified as a direct descendant through the maternal line of Anne of York, Richard's sister. The researchers at the University of Leicester found another descendant from an all-female line who asked to remain anonymous but donated DNA samples as well. A comparison of mitochondrial DNA from the two living relatives with that extracted from the skeleton produced a match, said geneticist Turi King of the University of Leicester at the press conference. "The results of the archaeological and osteological analysis, combined with the genealogical and genetic evidence, make for a strong and compelling case that these are indeed the remains of Richard III," she said.

It's "a spectacular find and a great bit of research," battle archaeologist Tony Pollard of the University of Glasgow in the United Kingdom tells ScienceNOW. Finding the body of a king killed in battle is unique, he says; Richard III was the last English monarch to die in battle. "We need to forget ideas of heavily choreographed warfare in the middle ages. It was much more brutal than we thought." The attention that the findings are generating is good for archaeology, he says. "It demonstrates there are still exciting things to learn."

But other scientists criticize the university for presenting short results that have not gone through peer review. Ross Barnett, an expert on ancient DNA at the Centre for GeoGenetics at the Natural History Museum of Denmark in Copenhagen, says the evidence presented on DNA was not convincing. "There may be more data. There probably is. But what was presented of the DNA work falls far short," he writes in an e-mail. "I think that sexy research like this is definitely deserving of a press conference, but my preference would have been for this to have occurred in tandem with publication of a peer-reviewed paper so that interested professionals and amateurs alike could instantly check up on what was being reported."

Richard III still labors under a bad reputation, in large part because of his portrayal as a villain in Shakespeare's play of the same name. But historians have argued that that depiction was Tudor propaganda. The fact that the skeleton showed no signs of the "withered arm" mentioned by Shakespeare is proof to some that much of the story surrounding Richard III's character is also fiction. Another contentious issue—what should happen with the king's remains—seems to have been settled, however. Richard III will be reinterred at Leicester Cathedral probably early next year, the mayor of Leicester said.

Friday, February 1, 2013

Tricky Tray to raise money for START II Animal Rescue

START II celebrates 20 years of saving animals! Please help us by donating to START II. All donations go directly to help the animals and will be used to pay for veterinary care, food, and equipment. Consider making a donation in honor or memory of a pet that you loved.











CDC's diabetes, obesity, and physical inactivity interactive atlases

In 2012, CDC’s Division of Diabetes Translation  unveiled their Diabetes Interactive Atlases ( http://www.cdc.gov/diabetes/atlas/ ), interactive Internet tools for the public to view data and trends of diagnosed diabetes (both prevalence and incidence), obesity, and leisure-time physical inactivity at the national, state, and county levels.


It is quite cool and can be very helpful for some things.

Users of this are able to access:

1) state and county-level data in the US

2) data on how counties compare with each other

3) maps and motion charts to examine how changes in diabetes coincide with changes in obesity over time and by location     http://www.cdc.gov/diabetes/atlas/

Consumer Reports Weighs In on Cancer Screening

Welcome to Physician's First Watch.


PHYSICIAN'S FIRST WATCH for February 1, 2013

David G. Fairchild, MD, MPH, Editor-in-Chief

Consumer Reports Weighs In on Cancer Screening

By Joe Elia

Don't assume that your patients have been shopping for televisions or stoves if they show up carrying Consumer Reports. CR rates 11 cancer screenings in its March issue.

On the basis of USPSTF reviews, the publication lists cervical, colon, and breast cancer screenings as its "get these" choices. At the bottom of the list are screens for ovarian, pancreatic, and testicular cancers.


Link(s):

Consumer Reports article (Free abstract) http://click.jwatch.org/cts/click?q=227%3B67793288%3BZ9aZR7iMLdMPoe9mGgBIydcb3w4L1c7h9Et3DkrcWGI%3D