Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Not to Panic Anyone But...


If you've got any of the following symptoms call your doctor:

Any unusual changes in your breast including redness, rapid increase in size of one breast, persistent itching of breast or nipple, thickening of breast tissue, stabbing pain, soreness, swelling under the arm, dimpling or ridging (for example, when you take your bra off, the bra marks stay – for a while), flattening or retracting of the nipple, or a texture that looks or feels like an orange (called peau d’orange).
If you're nursing a baby, don't just assume that it's a clogged duct or mastitis that will clear up on its own. I'm guilty of having done that with DS. Fortunately, it was just a clogged duct in that case but I still ought to have called my doctor. Especially be concerned if your baby refuses to nurse from that side.

WhyMommy over at "Toddler Planet" was diagnosed with Inflammatory Breast Cancer back in June. She has an almost 3 year old and a 6 month old and is now undergoing chemotherapy- please keep her & her family in your prayers!

(HT: MC Milker over at "The Not Quite Crunchy Parent")

10 on Tuesday: 10 Countries I'd Like to Visit

The theme of this week's 10 on Tuesday is "10 countries I'd like to visit". I got a chance to travel overseas a bit in my teens and hope to be in a position to do some more soon. In alphabetical order, here are some countries I hope to visit someday:

1. Australia
2. Austria
3. Belize
4. China
5. Czech Republic
6. Germany
7. Hungary. Note: I made a bone-head mistake when I first posted this, thinking that Budapest was in Romania. That would be Bucharest, duh!8. Ireland
9. Israel

10. Russia
Where would you like to visit?

Carnival of Homeschooling #83 is Up!

Summer over at "Mom is Teaching" is hosting this week's 83rd "Carnival of Homeschooling: School Physical Edition". She did an excellent job, and as always there is a multitude of intriguing posts!

Monday, July 30, 2007

For Women Who Love to Read

Leticia over at "Cause of Our Joy" gave a heads-up to a call for submissions for an anthology entitled Women Who Love to Read, the proceeds of which will benefit the University of Alberta [Canada] Pain Center. Those selected for inclusion will receive a copy of the anthology and the knowledge that they are helping patients in need. Details are listed over at "Rickety Contrivances".

Sunday, July 29, 2007

Ron Paul Supports Homeschooling!

I know he's got a snowball's chance in Hades of winning the election, but Congressman Ron Paul absolutely has the right idea when it comes to education. Here are some great quotes from him:

"I am absolutely convinced that the key to an educationally prosperous nation is found not in a federal government program, but in the right of parents - consulting with teachers and local administrators - to effectively utilize their moral responsibility for their children. By so doing, we will foster a philosophy of independence, self-reliance, and local responsibility; a philosophy which will permeate our classrooms and our government."

"One of my main goals in Congress is to return control over our children's education to parents and teachers in Texas and across America. Unfortunately, as the federal government continues to increase its influence over education, the role of parents and teachers becomes more and more limited. Over the last 30 years, this increased federal control has proven harmful to education standards while wasting taxpayer dollars. I believe that parents and teachers can better educate our children than federal education bureaucrats and politicians."

"Each time we are presented with a new education proposal from Washington, it involves another layer of harmful federal bureaucracy. No big-government spending program can or will solve our nation's education problems. One-size-fits-all programs simply do not work. I want to give parents the freedom to choose the best options for their children. I want teachers to know that their services are valuable to our nation without making them subservient to federal bureaucrats. And I want to encourage local residents to get involved with their local schools through educational programs and scholarship funds. My agenda of returning control over education dollars to the American people is the best way to strengthen public education."
I call on the other candidates to embrace a similar philosophy when it comes to education!

Saturday, July 28, 2007

The BlogHers Act Issue is "Global Health"

At the 2007 BlogHer conference in Chicago yesterday, the BlogHers Act issue was unveiled: "Global Health".

This is definitely an extremely important issue than needs to be addressed both here in the U.S. and around the world. The biggest challenge here in America is how to ensure affordable coverage is available to everyone without hurting quality or timely access to needed services. Having endured 5 years of the military healthcare system, I wouldn't wish socialized medicine to become the norm.

If physician compensation is capped at the rate that military doctors and doctors in countries with single-payer healthcare systems receive (in France the average physician salary is a mere $55k/year), you'd find a huge "brain drain" out of the profession into more lucrative careers. We've experienced this type of "brain drain" before- in the teaching profession. As soon as better-paying opportunities opened up for bright young women (including medicine), there was a marked decline in the quality of those entering the profession. Cap physician salaries and many of the best and brightest would choose to become lawyers, investment bankers, management consultants, etc. instead. It's a simple matter of pure economics.

Also, are Americans willing to tolerate long waiting lists for access to needed services? According to recent data about the National Health Service in the UK, 52% of patients have to wait 18 weeks or longer for needed services. In many cases, the wait exceed a full year! In Canada, the average wait time is 17.9 weeks (starting to see a pattern here?) and would be even longer if affluent Canadians did not travel to the U.S. for treatment.

The only time I've ever had trouble getting timely access to services was, you guessed it, when I was covered by the military system. I had a suspicious lump in my breast back in 2000 and was told I'd need to wait 5 weeks for a biopsy. That was unacceptable to me, so I decided to pay out-of-pocket for a 2nd opinion from a breast oncologist in private practice. He was able to get me in to see him within a matter of days AND was able to tell just from a clinical exam & ultrasound that the lump was benign (unlike the incompetent Army doctor who recommended the biopsy).

A huge thing that would help contain healthcare costs is tort reform. Malpractice suits drive up costs both directly and indirectly by encouraging the practice of "defensive medicine". An example of this is the overuse of Cesarean sections by OB-GYN's. Almost 1/3 of deliveries are now via C-section when the World Health Organization recommends the rate be no more than 15%.

Another way to contain healthcare costs would be to limit pharmaceutical marketing. Only 22% of employees of pharmaceutical companies work in research & development; by contrast, 39% work in marketing. In her book The Truth About Drug Companies: How They Deceive Us and What to Do About It, Dr. Marcia Angell of Harvard Medical School notes that the top U.S. drug makers spend about 2.5 times as much on marketing and administration as they do on R&D. In 2004, 11 major pharmaceutical companies spent the following:

CompanyMarketing costsResearch and Development
Pfizer$16.90 billion$7.68 billion
GlaxoSmithKline$12.93 billion$5.20 billion
Sanofi-Aventis$5.59 billion$9.26 billion
Johnson & Johnson$15.86 billion$5.20 billion
Merck$7.35 billion$4.01 billion
Novartis$8.87 billion$4.21 billion
AstraZeneca$7.84 billion$3.80 billion
Hoffman La Roche$7.24 billion$4.01 billion
Bristol-Myers Squibb$6.43 billion$2.50 billion
Wyeth$5.80 billion$2.46 billion
Abbott Labs$4.92 billion$1.70 billion























Media outlets wouldn't like it, but I see no reason why there needs to be ANY direct-to-consumer marketing of pharmaceuticals. Here's some startling statistics courtesy of the Organic Consumers Association website article "The Great Direct-to-Consumer Prescription Drug Advertising Con". Between 1999 and 2000, prescriptions for the 50 most heavily advertised drugs rose six times faster than prescriptions for all other drugs, according to Katharine Greider's book, The Big Fix. Sales of those fifty intensively promoted drugs were responsible for almost half the increase in Americans' overall drug spending that year. Spending on direct-to-consumer prescription drug advertising was $7.5 billion in 2005, a more than 1200% increase in one decade (the FDA changed its rules about drug ads in 1997). A study done by Kaiser Permanente found that 30% of those surveyed had requested a prescription for an advertised drug from their doctor. Nearly half had received the requested prescription, even though there are often cheaper alternatives that are equally effective.

Marketing to physicians should also be sharply curtailed. Journal advertisements are fine to a certain extent but there is no reason that pharmaceutical companies should be spending $7,000 per doctor on direct marketing. For an eye-opening look at some of the outrageous practices read "Following the Script: How Drug Reps Make Friends and Influence Doctors" from the Public Library of Science: Medicine journal.

If there was reform of pharmaceutical marketing and malpractice torts, that would go a long way to reducing healthcare costs in America without needing to institute socialized medicine.

Yet Another Reason to Homeschool...

Through the "Thursday Thirteen" meme, I discovered a very interesting blog called "Unabridged Opinions". The lady who writes it is named Jennie S. and she teaches middle school in San Diego. I believe she's an English teacher because she talks a lot about literature but I'm not 100% certain about that. Anyways, she wrote a post a few weeks ago that just gave me one of those "Thank you Lord for allowing me to be in a position to homeschool" moments when I read it:

"I had spent significant amounts of time during the school year trying to convince my principal, other teachers, and even a few parents that READING was the point of the class--not some sort of mystical demonstration of 'rigor'. I had a particularly tough week when I was being told that I should model my classroom after another teacher who is termed the 'worksheet queen'. This, in my department, is a term of endearment. The woman has a worksheet for everything, and her students get very, very good at filling them out. I find it really difficult to work that way, and I have a hard time convincing myself that time spent working on worksheets is better than time spent reading or talking about books."

And people wonder why so many former public schoolteachers decide to homeschool their own children...