6085. arkymalarky - 4/20/2004 10:50:27 PM A repeated response to Mac's inquiry about Bob's diabetes in the Music thread:
Lost over 30 pounds and his blood sugar has been normal/low--mostly 80s. He read somewhere that "stressors" can cause an onset of diabetes and one of those is an abscessed (sp?) tooth, which he found out he had, and had part of a root canal and antibiotics a few weeks ago, and since a few days after he started the penicillin his blood sugar hasn't been elevated, so we're hopeful that may have caused it. He has the other part of the root canal and a doctor's appointment May 3, so hopefully he'll find out something then.
6086. Macnas - 4/20/2004 10:54:50 PM That's good news, tell him I was asking after him.
6087. arkymalarky - 4/20/2004 10:57:26 PM I will. He's really looking healthy now. He walks four to five miles a day and has a really good, balanced diet. I need to follow suit. 6088. Macnas - 4/20/2004 10:59:43 PM Don't we all girl. 6089. thoughtful - 4/21/2004 2:55:22 AM great news arky. That's really interesting...in some ways my father became healthier after becoming diabetic because of lifestyle changes too....unexpected effect of the disease! 6090. judithathome - 4/21/2004 3:26:37 AM I'm sending my wheelchair back tomorrow. Just too tempting to hop in it and scoot to the kitchen when I need to be walking. 6091. thoughtful - 4/21/2004 4:20:26 AM J@H, how'd you do with your other health issue...everything turn out ok? 6092. judithathome - 4/21/2004 6:14:03 AM Yep! It was just a hemorrhagic cyst, benign. 6093. thoughtful - 4/21/2004 6:23:04 AM Phew! Was wondering and thinking about you. Glad for the good news. 6094. Absensia - 4/26/2004 7:11:51 AM Ask yourself: Will My Cholesterol Be Lower This Summer?
Reasearchers say it may. "Their study found the biggest seasonal changes occurred in women and in people with already elevated cholesterol, whose levels fluctuated as much as 18 points."
"It's important for physicians to know this because they need to factor it into how they treat patients," said lead author Dr. Ira Ockene, a University of Massachusetts cardiologist."
6095. Absensia - 5/22/2004 9:10:33 AM Haven't been able to be online much. What doc thought was rotator tear in shoulder turned out to be pinched nerve in neck from compressed disc. Just started physical therapy. Pain of torture joins transfer pain in shoulder and arm. It did force me to move computer and buy comp. chair. That helps to some degree. Pain meds don't help. Alas. 6096. Absensia - 5/28/2004 8:11:40 AM A federal appeals court ruled yesterday that U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft had far exceeded his authority by interfering with Oregon's physician-assisted suicide law.
Oregon Assisted-Suicide Law Upheld
The Nith Circuit Court Of Appeals found that Ashcroft's 2001 order to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency to pursue and possibly revoke the licenses of physicians who prescribe lethal prescriptions could not be enforced because it was contrary to federal law and against the "will of Congress."
It added that "the Attorney General has no specialized expertise in the field of medicine" and that he "imposes a sweeping and unpersuasive interpretation" of the Controlled Substance Act, which "directly conflicts with that of his predecessor," Janet Reno.
Although a spokesman for the Justice Department said no determination had been made as to what, if anything, will be done next, I suspect an appeal will be made of the 2-1 decision, asking for a hearing before a full panel of the Circuit Court. In it's decision, the Court cited a 1997 Supreme Court case, Washington v. Glucksberg wherein the USSC ruled there was no constituional right to assisted-suicided,(no federal question,) and O'Connor wrote "that the debate about physician-assisted suicide belongs in the laboratory of the states."
6097. Absensia - 5/28/2004 8:12:16 AM Ninth Circuit. 6098. judithathome - 5/28/2004 8:18:22 AM It's looking like John may be headed for the private sector soon....I hope. 6099. Absensia - 5/28/2004 8:44:16 AM That's the rumor I'm hearing. He's becoming expendable. 6100. judithathome - 5/28/2004 11:28:40 AM Hope his boss is, too. 6101. judithathome - 6/1/2004 11:29:29 PM I can't get the link to this article to work; it's from Yahoo:
Junk Food = One Third of America's Diet
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Junk foods such as sugary sodas and chips make up nearly one-third of calories in the U.S. diet, researchers said on Tuesday.
A study of 4,700 adults showed that, despite the increased popularity of low-carbohydrate diets, soft drinks and pastries pile on more calories in the daily diet than anything else.
"What is really alarming is the major contribution of 'empty calories' in the American diet," said Gladys Block, a professor of epidemiology and public health nutrition at the University of California, Berkeley, who led the study.
Writing in the June issue of the Journal of Food Chemistry and Analysis, Bock and colleagues said that sweets and desserts, soft drinks and alcoholic beverages account for nearly 25 percent of all calories consumed by Americans.
Salty snacks and fruit-flavored drinks add another five percent.
"We know people are eating a lot of junk food, but to have almost one-third of Americans' calories coming from those categories is a shocker. It's no wonder there's an obesity epidemic in this country," Bock said in a statement.
6102. arkymalarky - 6/2/2004 1:11:10 AM Government-subsidized lunchroom food is a big part of it too, especially for kids in poverty. Kids on free and reduced lunches get the standard lunchroom fare of deep-fried and fattening foods. As a teacher my biggest weight battles come from zipping to the lunchroom to eat when I get really busy and don't regularly bring something from home. 6103. arkymalarky - 6/2/2004 1:12:12 AM It irritates me, btw, how government reports on obesity in poor children don't even consider that. 6104. robertjayb - 6/2/2004 1:58:36 AM Don't forget the soda pop deals where school districts sell sole distribution rights to soft drink bottlers.
Penny wise and pound foolish (heh).
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