Blog Articles by Month: July 2009

Book Review: Shiver by Maggie Stiefvater

Updated November 21, 2021 I’ve been looking for a book to get lost in. The kind of book that sweeps you up, brings you on an adventure and leaves you satisfied, yet sad that it’s over. I’ve tried a bunch and they haven’t been bad, some have even been very good, but there has been…

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Health Care Reform: The Arrogance of the Healthy

Time for a wee rant over at HealthCentral: “Peter Singer, a professor of bioethics at Princeton University, believes putting a dollar value on human lives is the key to health care reform. Placing a value on human life will enable us to ration health care to get the “most bang for your buck” by denying…

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Customer Care

A while back, I read an article – somewhere on HealthCentral? I forget – about doctors in the US requiring their patients to sign an agreement not to rate them on e.g., RateMD before they would treat them and it’s been rattling around in my mind for a couple of months. Aside from the blackmail…

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Sex and the City: A Rant

Like many other women, I’ve been a rabid Sex and the City fan. Years ago, it was shown here in Canada on one of the specialty channels Friday night and rerun Saturday night and I would often watch both. I have most of the series on DVD (except for the two-part 6th season and I’m…

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Family Visits

Remember AB? She’s been again and this time, she brought her family – her husband Bjarke and their kids Camilla and Chris. As usual, being with AB felt like home and despite not having seen the kids since 2005 and Bjarke for at least as long, it was like we hadn’t been apart for more…

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Profusion

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A Beginners Guide to RA: Alternative Medicine

This week’s HealthCentral post is about alternative medicine: “Have you ever tried acupuncture? Massage therapy? Do you take supplements? Chances are you’re not relying exclusively on allopathic – i.e., Western-based – medicine, but are supplementing the care and prescriptions you receive from the medical system with other techniques and treatments. And if you aren’t, you’ve…

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Like Glass

Hold out your hand. Now tighten the muscles in your forearm – not a lot, just enough to be aware that it’s tensed. Hold it. Permanently. This is fibromyalgia pain. Well, one of them anyway. The bloody thing is forever surprising me with new and “interesting” qualities of pain it can invent. You don’t notice…

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Precariously Perched Potty

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Things That Make You Go ‘Huh?’

The week’s only half over and already, I’ve encountered three things that made my wee brain feel like I’d sprained it. Thing the first. I was watching a commercial the other day and it’s enough of rare occasion that it warrants mentioning, as I usually tape – yes, I still use a VCR – programs…

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Suspicion and Control

An FDA panel recently recommended lowering the maximum recommended daily dose of acetaminophen, a measure intended to decrease the number of accidental overdose related liver failure. They also recommended other things, among them to withdraw acetaminophen combination narcotics like Vicodin and Percocet from the market, as one study indicated that most such overdoses involved these…

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Habits, Tics and Verbal Twitches

People have habits, both in behaviour and in speech (yes, more about words today). Adolescents – and an unfortunate amount of young adults – say like way more often than necessary. Overhearing conversations on the street or in foodcourts where a third of the words is like can drive a person to distraction and dangerously…

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