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Showing posts with label health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label health. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Facebook users urged to donate organs

Facebook's new organ donation initiative hopes to inspire users to share what's inside of them on a whole new level.

CEO Mark Zuckerberg, who launched the campaign on ABC's Good Morning America on Tuesday, said the program should make it easier for interested people to register and to encourage their friends to do the same.

"Starting today, you can add that you're an organ donor to your timeline, and share your story about when, where or why you decided to become a donor," Zuckerberg said in a statement.

"Even one individual can have an outsized impact on the challenges facing another, and on the world."


The FLIP-SIDE of this article

What You Lose When You Sign That Donor Card

Giving away your organs sounds noble, but have doctors blurred the line between life and death?


Strong earthquake felt in Mexico City: Reuters witness



Babies Born Addicted To Drugs Tripled Since 2000: Study



Early Menopause Might Be Linked To Several Health Risks In Elderly

Women who experience menopause early in life are subject to higher risks of osteoporosis, mortality and fragility fracture later on, says a study done in An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology.
390 women, average age 48, were recruited in the study and regularly followed-up thereafter.

The study divided its subjects into two groups: those who experienced menopause early (i.e. prior to the age of 47) and those who experienced it later on.

56% of those who followed up in the early group had osteoporosis at the age of 77, compared to 30% in the late group.

The mortality rate in the later menopause group was slightly over 35%, compared to well over 52% in the early menopause group.


Heart Problems In Women Due To Less Oxygen Flow During Stress

Monday, April 23, 2012

Looking For Work? Several Job Fairs Scheduled This Week

If you’re looking for a job, there are plenty of opportunities to apply this week.

At least five job fairs will be held.  Open positions range anywhere from office work to warehouse labor.

Quality Control and Assemblers and Material Handlers

SC Works of Greer is hosting RL Enterprise & Associates Tuesday.  They will be interviewing for temp and temp-to-hire quality control positions with client employers in the Duncan and Spartanburg areas.  They are also accepting applications for assemblers and material handlers in Easley.  The job fair takes place April 24 from 9 to 11 a.m. at the SC Works Greer office on North Main Street.  Organizers ask that you bring your resume and references.

Temporary Office Support

SC Works of Greenville is hosting a job fair for Bi-Lo, Inc. Tuesday.  Organizers are looking to fill temporary office support positions.

If you are interested, go to the SC works Center-McAlister Square on South Pleasantburg Drive April 24 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.  Bring your resume and be prepared for a pre-screening interview.

Wide Variety Of JobsUp to 250 new positions are now open in the Upstate.  Marketplace Staffing is holding a job fair Wednesday.  Organizers are looking to hire entry level and experienced positions.

The staffing and human capital solutions firm says the jobs include assembly, packers, warehouse support, material handlers, forklift operators, machine operators, general labor, maintenance technicians, and CNC machinists.  The positions are located across the Upstate including Clinton, Fountain Inn, Laurens, Greenville and Spartanburg and will be on all shifts.

Applications will be accepted for all positions between 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. at the Hampton Inn in Clinton, on E. Corporate Center Drive.

Follow-up interviews will be scheduled soon after.

Distribution and Warehouse

SC Works Spartanburg and Phillips Staffing are teaming up to hold a job fair Friday.  Organizers say they are looking to hire for several positions including pickers, packers, forklift driver, shipping/receiving associates, material handlers, inspection associates, assembly associates, and inventory control associates.

Applicants must be 18-years-old and have six months experience in distribution or warehouse work and have a high school diploma or equivalent.

If you are interested, the job fair will be held April 27 between 10:30 a.m. and noon at the Spartanburg SC Works office.

Job Placement
Jobs are available immediately through ResCare, an employer that helps needy families and puts welfare recipients back to work.

Organizers say there are jobs open in several different areas across the state.

You can see all of the jobs posted and apply online by clicking here.

Those selected will start a two-phase training period.

16 Facts About Walmart That Will Blow Your Mind

How This Little Kid Became The Hottest Entrepreneur In America

Foods that Whiten Teeth

A surprising number of foods in your fridge can counteract dental dinginess and actually whiten your teeth.


How To Look Good Using Food Stamps: Beautify Yourself with the Foods You Buy at the Market

A lot of the foods you buy at the market using your food stamps (EBT card) can also be used for external health benefits, such as your face, hair, teeth, and more.  Learn more about how basic condiments and spices are very useful to be used to achieve both internal and external beauty saving you money and time.   

Thursday, March 15, 2012

Harlem Churches See A Boom Of Tourists Seeking Gospel Music, But Congregants Bristle At Rudeness

NEW YORK -- The stern warning issued from the pulpit was directed at the tourists – most of whom had arrived late – a sea of white faces with guidebooks in hand. They outnumbered the congregation itself: a handful of elderly black men and women wearing suits and dresses and old-fashioned pillbox hats.

"We're hoping that you will remain in place during the preaching of the Gospel," a church member said over the microphone at this Harlem church on a recent Sunday morning. "But if you have to go, go now. Go before the preacher stands to preach."

No one left then. But halfway through the sermon, a group of French girls made their way toward the velvet ropes that blocked the exit. An usher shook his head firmly, but they ignored him and walked out.

The clash between tourists and congregants plays out every Sunday at Mother African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church, the oldest black church in New York state. It's one of many Harlem churches that have become tourist attractions for visitors from all over the world who want to listen to soulful gospel music at a black church service. With a record number of tourists descending upon New York City last year, the crowds of foreigners are becoming a source of irritation among faithful churchgoers.

Opinion

The Go-Nowhere Generation


Christians have no right to wear cross at work, says Government

Christians do not have a right to wear a cross or crucifix openly at work, the Government is to argue in a landmark court case.

In a highly significant move, ministers will fight a case at the European Court of Human Rights in which two British women will seek to establish their right to display the cross.
It is the first time that the Government has been forced to state whether it backs the right of Christians to wear the symbol at work.


Santorum supports Puerto Rico statehood with English language condition

 Campaigning on this island U.S. territory Wednesday, Republican presidential candidate Rick Santorum spoke out in favor of statehood for Puerto Rico but said he also favored requiring it to adopt English as its official language. Puerto Ricans generally speak both Spanish and English.

Throughout the day, the former Pennsylvania senator was asked repeatedly about his position on the territory becoming the 51st state.

"I would support the people of Puerto Rico if they make the decisive decision to move forward with that, I would support it," he told a group of about 50 people at a town hall meeting. "But that's a decision the people of Puerto Rico have to make and so far they've chosen not to make it. And so talk to your friends, and see if you can work that out."

NOAA changes hurricane categories scale


Stronger hurricanes have been given a statistical nudge starting this year. The Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale, the Category 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 designation of the tropical cyclones, has been adjusted by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
Category 3 hurricanes (formerly 111 mph to 130 mph) 111 mph to 129 mph.
Category 4 (131-155 mph) 130 mph to 156 mph.


LinkedIn is a Hacker's Dream Tool

If you use LinkedIn, you've probably told the site where you work, what you do and who you work with. That's a gold mine for hackers, who are increasingly savvy in using that kind of public -- but personal -- information for pinpoint attacks.

It's called "spear phishing," and it paid off last year in two especially high-profile security breaches: a Gmail attack that ensnared several top U.S. government officials and a separate attack on RSA, whose SecurID authentication tokens are used by millions.



Read more here: http://www.thestate.com/2012/03/14/2192360/noaa-changes-hurricane-categories.html#storylink=cpy

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

What You Lose When You Sign That Donor Card

Giving away your organs sounds noble, but have doctors blurred the line between life and death?


There are natural ways to unclog your arteries to prevent a heart attack or stroke...

Your arteries are the rivers within your body that continually transport essential nutrients and oxygen from your heart to the rest of your body.

A big part of staying healthy and also keeping your arteries clean and clear is related to your diet and what you eat. There’s no joke in the popular saying that says: “You are what you eat.” It just makes good sense that what you put in your body is what will reflect out in all aspects of your health.

Sunday, October 30, 2011

Fox to bring back 'In Living Color'

Remember Homey D. Clown? And Fire Marshal Bill?

Well, Fox has announced it will revive In Living Color, the sketch comedy series which
became famous in the early 1990s thanks to characters like Damon Wayans' Homey and Jim Carrey's Bill. Keenen Ivory Wayans, the original series' creator, will serve as host and executive producer of the new episodes. And even though the show helped launch the careers of Wayans' own family as well as those of Jamie Foxx, David Alan Grier and Carrey, the rest of the cast will be new faces.

Our Unpaid, Extra Shadow Work

THE other night at the supermarket I saw a partner at a downtown law firm working as a grocery checker, scanning bar codes. I’m sure she earns at least $300,000 per year. Even so, she was scanning and bagging her purchases in the self-service checkout line. For those with small orders, this might save time spent waiting in slower lines. Nonetheless, she was performing the unskilled, entry-level jobs of supermarket checker and bagger free of charge.

This is “shadow work,” a term coined 30 years ago by the Austrian philosopher and social critic Ivan Illich, in his 1981 book of that title. For Dr. Illich, shadow work was all the unpaid labor — including, for example, housework — done in a wage-based economy.

Census: The new U.S. neighborhood defined by diversity as all-white enclaves vanish

Around the region and across the country, the archetypal all-white neighborhood is vanishing with remarkable speed. In many places, the phenomenon is not being driven by African Americans moving to the suburbs. Instead, it is primarily the result of the nation’s soaring number of Hispanics and Asians, many of whom are immigrants.

The result has been the emergence of neighborhoods, from San Diego to Denver to Miami, that are more diverse than at any time in American history.

Daniel Fawcett Tiemann “The Paint King Of New York,” From The Village Of Harlem

Once upon a time there was a village called Manhattanville, a small, originally Quaker community that planted itself between a bustling but still bucolic section of Bloomingdale Road (later Broadway) and the Hudson River. A remnant of the old village remains in the small neighborhood that shares its name today, north of Morningside Heights between 122nd and 135th streets on the west side.

Founded in 1806 the village grew due to its proximity to a major artery that led to the city of New York, but its fortunes really multiplied due to a developing port industry along the water. Together with its sister village Harlem, they grew into healthy rural communities.




Black buying power nears $1.1 trillion

Black buying power is expected to reach $1.1 trillion by 2015, according to The State of the African- American Consumer Report, recently released, collaboratively by Nielsen, a leading global provider of insights and analytics into what consumers watch and buy, and the National Newspaper Publishers Association (NNPA), a federation of more than 200 Black community newspapers across the U.S.
“Too often, companies don't realize the inherent differences of our community, are not aware of the market size impact and have not optimized efforts to develop messages beyond those that coincide with
Black History Month,” said Cloves Campbell, NNPA chairman. “It is our hope that by collaborating with Nielsen, we'll be able to tell the African-American consumer story in a manner in which businesses will understand,” he said, “and, that this understanding will propel those in the C-Suite to develop stronger, more inclusive strategies that optimize their market growth in Black communities, which would be a win-win for all of us.”

Taco Bell Terrorized As Man demands More Beef

A disgruntled customer apparently threw a Molotov cocktail outside the drive-through window of an Albany, Ga., Taco Bell after complaining that his two XXL Taco Bell chalupas weren’t living up to their promise of having extra meat.

The man, whom police and Taco Bell employees were unable to identify because of poor-quality surveillance footage, called the Taco Bell around 4 a.m. demanding more meat for his chalupas, the police report stated.

Assad predicts disaster if West meddles in Syria

Western powers would cause an "earthquake" in the Middle East if they intervened in Syria, President Bashar al-Assad said in an interview published on Sunday, after protesters demanded outside protection from a crackdown that has killed 3,000 people.

Syria, as Assad noted in his interview with Britain's Sunday Telegraph, sits at the heart of the volatile Middle East, where it borders Israel, Lebanon, Turkey, Iraq and Jordan.
"It is the faultline, and if you play with the ground, you will cause an earthquake," he said. "Do you want to see another Afghanistan, or tens of Afghanistans?"

White fruits and vegetables may lower stroke risk

Every 25 grams per day of white fruits and vegetables consumed led to a 9 percent decrease in the risk of stroke, and apples and pears were the most commonly consumed "white fruit," according to the study, published in the November issue of Stroke.

"Green, orange/yellow and red/purple fruits and vegetables weren't related to stroke. However, the risk of stroke incidence was 52 percent lower for people with a high intake of white fruits and vegetables, compared to people with a low intake," said study author Linda M. Oude Greip, a postdoctoral fellow at Wageningen University in the Netherlands.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

101-Year-Old Woman Evicted From Home In Detroit

A 101-year-old woman was evicted from the southwest Detroit home where she lived for nearly six decades after her 65-year-old son failed to pay the mortgage.

Texana Hollis was evicted Monday and her belongings were placed outside the home. Her son, Warren Hollis, said he didn’t pay the bill for several years and disregarded eviction notices.

“I kept it from her because I didn’t want to worry her,” Warren Hollis told WXYZ-TV for a report that aired Monday night. “I was just so sure it wasn’t going to happen.”

Wayne County Chief Deputy Treasurer David Szymanski told The Associated Press on Tuesday that the Hollises took out an adjustable-rate mortgage in 2002. A default and foreclosure notice was filed in November.

“They ended up owing $80,000 on the home,” Szymanski said. “Warren indicates he did not make the payments. He got the notices, but threw them away.”

County records show that property taxes were paid on the home through summer 2010. A winter tax bill of $55.95, including interest and fees, was unpaid, and a $778.44 summer tax bill was due this month

Job seekers, get ready for personality tests

More employers are using pre-hire assessments

As it turns out, your childhood misdeeds, along with whether you care about someone else’s bad day and how much you read, may have an impact on how a prospective employer views you.
To get a read on applicants, more employers are using pre-hire assessments, which can check personality, cognitive ability, and competency, among other areas. About 56% of companies are using some sort of assessment tool as part of the hiring process this year, up from 48% in 2010, according to Aberdeen Group, a Boston-based research firm. 


Facebook Organizes Friends into Lists Automatically

According to information posted to the Facebook blog , the new friends list feature – labeled Smart Lists – will automatically create groups for users' friends based on things they have in common: Workplace, school, city or family.
Additionally, users will be able to create lists for close friends and acquaintances. Though these lists won't update themselves, this innovation means that you'll be able to view photos or posts from those you really care about while skimming over information from more distant connections. You'll only receive major news – like engagements – from those flagged as acquaintances.


Georgia has 3rd highest poverty rate among states

New Census data shows that Georgia's poverty rate was the third highest in the country in 2010, up two spots from last year, with more than 1.8 million residents counted among the poor.

The only states with higher poverty rates in 2010 were Louisiana and Mississippi. Nationally, 15.1 percent of Americans were living in poverty last year.

Georgia also ranked eighth in the nation in the number of uninsured residents, at a rate of 19.4 percent. Roughly 1.9 million Georgians did not have health insurance last year when the state joined a challenge to President Barack Obama's health care plan, meant in part to address rising numbers of people without health insurance.

SAT scores drop in Georgia, South Carolina, U.S.

More high school graduates are trying to go to college, if SAT results released Wednesday are any indication.
But that doesn’t necessarily mean more graduates are ready for college.

Across Georgia, South Carolina and the nation, 2011 high school graduates posted lower SAT scores on average than students who graduated a year earlier. On the other hand, no graduating class has ever had more students take the SAT than last year’s.


Ohio has country's 11th highest foreclosure rate

Ohio had one of the nation's highest foreclosure rates last month as banks stepped up their actions against homeowners behind on their mortgage payments.

Foreclosure listing firm RealtyTrac Inc. said Thursday that the number of U.S. homes that received an initial default notice - the first step in the foreclosure process - jumped 33 percent in August from July.

Six Things the Film Industry Doesn't Want You To Know About

You may already be a film industry cynic. Maybe you think Hollywood is a barren wasteland, devoid of creativity and originality. Maybe you’re sick of seeing talented people get ignored and vapid hacks get splashed all over the trades. Maybe you’re tired of 3D everything and having to re-buy your movies every five to ten years.

I’m not here to dissuade you of any of that. Hell no, I’m here to make it worse. Get ready, because this is some of the rottenest shit of which the film industry is capable. These are the things so terrible that Hollywood has to cover them up, lest God see their sin and smite them accordingly (and keep various government entities and lawyers off their backs, of course). If you still had any kind thoughts toward Hollywood, I suggest you prepare yourself for crushing disappointment.

NLRB costing South Carolina jobs

The National Labor Relations Board is alleging that Boeing violated labor laws by locating its new 787 Dreamliner facility in North Charleston, S.C. For years, Boeing has operated predominantly in Washington state, where it has invested billions of dollars and created thousands of jobs.


New local plant will provide 350 jobs 

South Carolina's top-flight aerospace team got a boost from a hometown player Wednesday when The InterTech Group Inc. announced its subsidiary's plans for a major manufacturing facility in North Charleston that would bring 350 jobs to a region hungry for employment and new investment.

10 Things Social Security Won't Tell You

The secret of bigger benefits, and the truth about the agency's bottom line.

A Social Security spokeswoman points out that interest income from the Treasury bonds held in the trust fund will allow it to keep growing until 2022 -- even if the agency has to siphon off some money to offset any shortages in tax revenue -- and won't be exhausted until 2036, when the first Gen Xers begin retiring. But that's already one year earlier than previous projections. After that, the agency says tax income under the current system will only cover about 75% of benefit payments through 2085.


Teachers Are Put to the Test

Teacher evaluations for years were based on brief classroom observations by the principal. But now, prodded by President Barack Obama's $4.35 billion Race to the Top program, at least 26 states have agreed to judge teachers based, in part, on results from their students' performance on standardized tests.

So with millions of teachers back in the classroom, many are finding their careers increasingly hinge on obscure formulas like the one that fills a whiteboard in an economist's office here.

FDA Slams 'Dr. Oz' for Apple Juice Report

Mehmet Oz, MD, the Columbia University thoracic surgeon who gained fame first in books and more recently with his syndicated television show, has run afoul of the Food and Drug Administration with his report about levels of arsenic in popular brands of apple juice.

The FDA called the report "irresponsible and misleading" and another TV doc, ABC's Richard Besser, MD, accused Oz of fear-mongering.

In a recent episode of The Dr. Oz Show, Oz reported that five brands of apple juice -- Minute Maid, Apple & Eve, Mott's, Juicy Juice, and Gerber -- all contained some level of arsenic and suggested that this was a cause for concern.

The show used an independent laboratory, EMSL Analytical, to test dozens of samples from three U.S. cities to compare the level of arsenic in the juices to the Environmental Protection Agency's safe standard for drinking water, less than 10 parts per billion.

At least one sample for four of the five brands -- excluding Minute Maid -- came in above that threshold. The highest level measured was in Gerber apple juice, at 36 ppb.

The segment earned a stiff rebuke from representatives of government, industry, and academia for causing unnecessary alarm, even before it aired.

Apple juice safe despite arsenic, FDA tells Dr. Oz

Dr. Donald Zink, senior science advisor at the agency's Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition, said on the site that arsenic occurs naturally in the environment and can be found in certain food products, including fruit juices and juice concentrates. But the agency says the levels are too low to pose a threat to human health.

Publisher's Note:

So, let me get this straight . . . 

Are all of these people upset with Dr. Oz because he informed the public that 'arsenic' IS indeed found in apple juice, or that he informed the public that arsenic is approved to be in apple juice by many overseeing agencies in our country?
 
So which is it?  I thought "Knowledge is Power?"  Oh, I see.  Knowledge is Power as long as no one else is knowledgeable about the power that is being wield by others.  I GOT IT!  Apparently, Dr. Oz got it also.     

A Must Read for ALL Women

Farrakhan: The Divine Value of the Female

 The enemy's aim has been to devalue the woman transforming her into a sexual plaything instead of treating her with the reverence and honor she deserves as a serious co-creator with God, said The Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan in an important and sobering message delivered at Mosque Maryam, the international headquarters of the Nation of Islam.

women_mayram09-11-2011.jpg
The upstairs section of Mosque Maryam was packed with women seeking guidance from the Minister. Photo: Courtney X. Powell
“No matter what your race, color or ethnicity, you have never looked at yourself as a part of The Divine. That will change today,” Min. Farrakhan told the packed auditorium and those viewing live Sept. 11 via internet webcast.

“God cannot make us the head if the woman is not lifted. If God does not lift the woman, the man will never come up, so if God is going to make a new world and a better world, He is going to make that world coming through a woman,” said Min. Farrakhan.

Sunday, September 4, 2011

Man Dies From Toothache, Couldn't Afford Meds

video platformvideo managementvideo solutionsvideo player

A 24-year-old Cincinnati father died from a tooth infection this week because he couldn't afford his medication, offering a sobering reminder of the importance of oral health and the number of people without access to dental or health care.

According to NBC affiliate WLWT, Kyle Willis' wisdom tooth started hurting two weeks ago. When dentists told him it needed to be pulled, he decided to forgo the procedure, because he was unemployed and had no health insurance.

When his face started swelling and his head began to ache, Willis went to the emergency room, where he received prescriptions for antibiotics and pain medications. Willis couldn't afford both, so he chose the pain medications.

The tooth infection spread, causing his brain to swell. He died Tuesday.

Publisher's Note:


I, too, had underwent a similar experience back in 1987. when I, too, had a bad tooth that needed to be extracted, and both antibiotics and pain killers were prescribed for me to take, but my pain was so severe that I chose to take only the pain killer medicine, and not the antibiotic.  Well, despite my medical training and knowledge, I had continued to take only the pain killer medicine.  Unfortunately, as a result of my ignorance, my tongue obviously became infected to the point that it risen to the roof of my mouth leaving very little room to swallow, nor could I speak.


Suffice to say, my dad (God Rest His Soul) took me to the hospital emergency room, and I was administered an IV, and believe me, this time I took the prescribed antibiotics!  Underneath my tongue was nothing but gelatinous matter - jelly like substance that was badly infected.  I never would have thought in a million years that I would become a victim of my own ignorance.  Especially with my knowledge, but when you've never been sick a day in your life to that extent, and have never been admitted to the hospital, you do begin to feel that you are invincible. 


I'd soon found out thereafter that I was not invincible.  And yes, I learned that I, too, can get sick.


My dentist at that time learned about my emergency care.  After all, it was him who had provided me with the dental care, and prescribed the medicines.  He called, and I was able to detect the nervousness on his part.  I assured him that what had happened to me was NOT his fault at all!  And he did not have to worry about me taking him to court because it was not his fault.  Why?  Because it was NOT his fault.  It was me who chose not to take the prescribe antibiotic!  How could I ever in my conscience blame another individual for my wrong doing?  It is not right to do so, period!


In fact, he was the BEST dentist I ever had in my life!  I sincerely hope that he's still alive, and doing well.  I really do. 


PLEASE: If a dentist or physician is to ever prescribe antibiotics for you to take, please do so.  And if you do not have insurance, please see a dentist anyway!  Please see a physician.  I had learned that there are some physicians and dentists who are very empathetic to your need as a non-insured person.  I am very sadden by this story.  Not every dentist and physician are ruthless greedy individuals.  They, too, needed someone's help at one time or another.  NEVER ASSUME THAT NO ONE WILL HELP YOU!


And just so you know - until you do get medical attention in relationship to getting antibiotics for your infected tooth/teeth/mouth, please eat healthy portions of onions (Onions are a natural antibiotic) - place tea bags onto the affected area - wash your mouth with "over-proof liquor" and/or continue to rinse your mouth entirely with alcohol-based mouthwash by swishing it in your mouth for approximately five minutes before spitting it out. 

END.
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Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan - News Press Conference re: Libya - March 31st, 2011

His Music Will Last Forever!