Tuesday, 27 March 2012

Princess Health andSPORTS TALK in NEW HAMBURG.Princessiccia

Princess Health andSPORTS TALK in NEW HAMBURG.Princessiccia

Healthy Families, Healthy Students
Join us at Grandview PS (341 Huron Place) for an evening of professional workshops to guide your family to healthier living

Thursday March 29th; 6:30 - 8:30pm

6:15 Registration
6:30 Workshop 1
7:15 Break, Refreshments, Questions
7:30 Workshop 2
 
Training without Time:
Improving Sports Performance


Learn efficient & effective ways to stay fit despite busy schedules - exercise techniques based on the latest fitness research

Presented by: Dr. Sean Delanghe Bsc Hon, D.C.

Call 519-662-1881 or e-mail thetimmons@sympatico.ca for more information


FREE
Princess Health and Senate panel OKs pill-mill bill with provision moving prescription-monitoring system to attorney general's office.Princessiccia

Princess Health and Senate panel OKs pill-mill bill with provision moving prescription-monitoring system to attorney general's office.Princessiccia

Over the objections of the Kentucky Medical Association, a Senate committee today approved a bill that would "transfer oversight of the state�s prescription-monitoring system from the Cabinet for Health and Family Services to the attorney general�s office," Jack Brammer reports for the Lexington Herald-Leader.

House Bill 4, an effort to fight so-called "pill mills," passed the Senate Judiciary Committee 7-2 after Chairman Tom Jensen, R-London, said last week that he trusted the attorney general's office to handle the job, now in the hands of the Kentucky Board of Medical Licensure. The bill now goes to the Senate Rules Committee, which could send it to the floor or to another committee, a move that would probably kill it since this is the last week of the legislative session.

The bill would allow no more than 20 attorney-general employees to access the monitoring system. It would also require doctors to report pain-pill prescriptions within 24 hours starting July 1, 2013, and would "not charge health care providers a fee for using the system," Brammer reports. The committee also changed the bill to allows only physicians to own pain-management clinics. (Read more)

Monday, 26 March 2012

Princess Health and State starting free training for dentists in pediatric dentistry.Princessiccia

One of the many problems with Kentucky's oral health is that not enough dentists are willing to accept children as patients, or lack proficiency in treating children when they are around age 1, the recommended time for a child's first dental visit.

Next week, the state Department of Public Health will start to offer free continuing education for dentists and other oral-health professionals who need or want training in pediatric dentistry, funded by a federal grant.

The Access for Babies and Children to Dentistry (ABCD) program will have one-day training sessions in Lexington on Friday, April 6, at the Embassy Suites on Newtown Pike next to the interstate, and in Somerset on Wednesday, April 11, at the Hampton Inn on US 27. Both sessions will start at 8:30 a.m. The sessions offer 8 continuing education units out of a possible 20 in the program.

For more information about the training, and to register for it, contact Meghan Towle at Meghan.Towle@ky.gov or 502-564-2154.

Princess Health and Obama finally embraces the Republican term 'Obamacare'.Princessiccia

�The Obama administration made a decision on Friday to own the term�ObamaCare�,� NBC News reports in its First Read blog, adding a capital letter not often used. �It had been used as a pejorative by Republicans, but the White House has made the decision to embrace it and not let opponents have a word that they only drive as a negative. White House senior adviser David Plouffe noted on �Meet the Press� Sunday that, in 10 years, health care will be a positive and cited polling that people don�t want to re-litigate it. We can report that last part came from Democratic polling Plouffe has seen; he was not citing any public polling on this specific issue.�

The NBC item is also based on a story yesterday from The New York Times, which reported that Democrats are �launching a Twitter campaign that seeks to build positive associations for it.� The Twitter post read, �If you�re proud of Obamacare and tired of the other side using it as a dirty word, complete this sentence: #ILikeObamacare because ...�

The story noted that �Obamacare� has been used �primarily by Republicans, as a term of disdain. Democrats have tried to limit the term�s use to reshape perceptions, but that has been a tough sell.� The Times quotes Grant Barrett, a vice president for the American Dialect Society, who said that once a word becomes political, it is very difficult to quash it: �It�s an invitation to have your heart broken. You forbid it, and they start writing it on the bathroom stalls.�

For the Times story and a nice graphic showing the history of the term, and examples of its use, by Amanda Cox, Alicia DeSantis, Alicia Parlapiano and Jeremy White, click here.

Saturday, 24 March 2012

Princess Health and More foreign-born doctors practice in rural areas, come from poor nations; Kentucky is about average, West Virginia is high.Princessiccia

Princess Health and More foreign-born doctors practice in rural areas, come from poor nations; Kentucky is about average, West Virginia is high.Princessiccia

More than 15 percent of physicians in the U.S. received training in lower-income countries, including India, Pakistan and the Phillippines, a new study has found, reports Lori Kersey of The Charleston Gazette. The study was a joint effort by the National Research Council and the Stanley Medical Research Institute, and was published online on PLoS ONE.

Most doctors from low-income countries practice in low-income areas of the U.S., where most U.S.-trained doctors don't usually want to go. West Virginia has the most such doctors, at 29 percent all of physicians in the state. Kentucky has 16 percent, just above the national average of 15.4 percent. Montana, Idaho and Alaska all have less than 2 percent.

The authors of the study said low-income countries that send most of their doctors to the U.S. lost more money training them than they receive in U.S. foreign aid. In 2010, the Phillippines spent $1.7 billion training more than 20,000 doctors who then came to the U.S., but was only given $33 million in U.S. foreign aid. The authors suggest the U.S. should pay those countries back in some way. (Read more)

Friday, 23 March 2012

Princess Health and Rural newspapers don't write a lot of health stories � but they should, expert says.Princessiccia

Princess Health and Rural newspapers don't write a lot of health stories � but they should, expert says.Princessiccia

�If a newspaper can�t stand for better health and better health care, then what in the world can it stand for?� This was the galvanizing statement of a talk today by Al Cross, director of the Institute for Rural Journalism and Community Issues, who keynoted the third annual Kentucky Health Literacy Summit. Cross discussed ways newspapers are � and aren�t � publishing health-related stories on their pages.

A research paper Cross presented with University of Kentucky graduate student Sarah Vos yesterday showed that with a few exceptions, rural newspapers in the state are not publishing many articles about health care and health. The vast majority of articles � 71 percent � run on the inside of the paper rather than on the front page. In large part, stories are institutionally oriented, Cross said, often pertaining to promoting the local hospital or reporting on problems with it.

Interviews with rural publishers and editors in Kentucky and Mississippi showed �while many of them believe health coverage is important, they are reluctant to be seen as crusading in the news columns for a cause, even if it is one that usually has no countervailing interest,� Cross said. He said Kentucky editors are specifically reluctant to point out health disparities comparing their community to neighbors, the state or nation, because they want to build up the community �rather than going out of their way to point out local problems that have no easy solutions.�

Another issue is that most of Kentucky�s 150 newspapers serve very small markets, which �mean less revenue, small staffs and low pay, so most of these newspapers lack the resources to do what we journalists call enterprise reporting,� Cross said. And with all but two Kentucky dailies owned by corporate chains, that can mean �less news space, fewer staff members, more focus on number of stories rather than quality, less focus on community service, more on bottom line,� he said.

However, rural newspapers continue to have considerable influence over their readership, with 60 percent of adults saying their local paper is their primary source of news. Their content is almost entirely local. Thus, Cross said, there are opportunities � and ones that don�t require a lot of legwork. A story about someone's life being saved because she got a cancer screening can make a big impact, he said, and sometimes an article written by an outside source, such as a local extension agent, �doesn�t need to be put on page 12.� Cross said. Newspapers can use social media, such as Facebook, to promote their stories and find local people willing to talk about a health issue.

Cross also recommended Kentucky Health News as a service editors can rely on for stories that can be used verbatim or be easily localized. Cross noted newspapers are using the service, and �We think we are moving the needle.�

Thursday, 22 March 2012

Princess Health and Rural newspapers have power to influence people's health, but few health articles are being published in Kentucky, study finds.Princessiccia

Princess Health and Rural newspapers have power to influence people's health, but few health articles are being published in Kentucky, study finds.Princessiccia

By Tara Kaprowy
Kentucky Health News

Though studies suggest that newspapers can influence people's decisions about their health and can even lead to public-policy changes, for the most part Kentucky's rural newspaper editors are publishing very few health-related stories, a report compiled at the University of Kentucky concluded.

The six-month study found more than 1,200 articles  primarily about health were published in 131 rural Kentucky newspapers, including opinion pieces, reprints, press releases, briefs and letters to the editor. That averaged to nine stories per newspaper in six months, though daily papers tended to run far more articles than non-dailies (52 percent of dailies ran health articles 1 to 2 times per week while 68 percent of non-dailies ran health articles less than once a month).

Speaking at the third-annual Kentucky Health Literacy Summit, study co-author Al Cross said he wasn't surprised by the findings, sensing "there wasn't a great deal of coverage out there to help people live healthier lives." But Cross said his goal as director of UK's Institute for Rural Journalism and Community Issues "is to help rural newspapers help define the public agenda."

"In Kentucky," he said, "that needs to be about health."

The topic of health-care funding and policy accounted for 35 percent of the articles published, though co-author Sarah Vos said that number is likely skewed because the time period analyzed included a legislative session during which there was extensive discussion about Medicaid.

Stories on drugs and alcohol accounted for 12 percent of the total, followed by tobacco/smoking (9.5 percent) and exercise, food, diet or obesity (8.6 percent). Vos also found stories that did run were often incomplete, with 40 percent failing to contextualize the problem for the reader. Only 20 percent mentioned health disparities, the differences in health between geographic areas and demographic sectors.

While there is a dearth of health reporting in rural newspapers � all newspapers but those that serve the Lexington, Louisville and Cincinnati areas were included in the study � they could have considerable pull in the health decisions people make. Vos cited one study showing media coverage can influence individual health decisions and preventive behaviors, and one that showed coverage of health issues can lead to both changes in public policy and public perception.

Rural newspapers are well read by their readership, with the average reader spending about 39 minutes reading their local paper. Sixty percent of adults say their rural paper is their main source of news, Vos said. "Rural newspapers have a special relationship with readers," she said. "It's intimate. One researcher even called them an extended member of the family."

For a copy of the paper, click here.