JackieDel

Real Name: Jackie
Location:unknown
Joined:9-9-2007
Make JackieDel a Guide: follow clipper
About me
My interests are politics, animal rights and creativity








   
 
 
 
   
 
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1
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Brain Tumor Survivors Shouldn't Take It Easy
JackieDel
by JackieDel  10-21-2009   
 The mice that were able to exercise scored just as well on a memory test as normal mice did; however, the mice that did not have access to the exercise wheel did not. "It was remarkable that the irradiated, running mice were just like the normal, non-irradiated mice that didn't exercise," lead researcher and graduate student Sarah Wong-Goodrich of the Duke Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, was quoted as saying. "We were expecting some memory retention issues with a longer delay and there weren't any." The researchers believe exercise benefits the mind by improving blood flow to the hippocampus in the brain, a key area for learning and memory.
1
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HealthGrades: Patients half as likely to die at best hospitals
JackieDel
by JackieDel  10-16-2009   
 "If all hospitals performed at the level of a five-star rated hospital across 17 procedures and diagnoses studied for mortality rates, 224,537 lives of Medicare patients could potentially have been saved from 2006 through 2008."
3
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The Burger That Shattered Her Life
JackieDel
by JackieDel  10-4-2009   
 Meat companies and grocers have been barred from selling ground beef tainted by the virulent strain of E. coli known as O157:H7 since 1994, after an outbreak at Jack in the Box restaurants left four children dead. Yet tens of thousands of people are still sickened annually by this pathogen, federal health officials estimate, with hamburger being the biggest culprit. Ground beef has been blamed for 16 outbreaks in the last three years alone, including the one that left Ms. Smith paralyzed from the waist down. This summer, contamination led to the recall of beef from nearly 3,000 grocers in 41 states. Ms. Smith’s reaction to the virulent strain of E. coli was extreme, but tracing the story of her burger, through interviews and government and corporate records obtained by The New York Times, shows why eating ground beef is still a gamble. Neither the system meant to make the meat safe, nor the meat itself, is what consumers have been led to believe.
8
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Is Britain's Health-Care System Really That Bad?
JackieDel
by JackieDel  9-28-2009    2
 How does NHS health care compare with U.S. health care? Like most developed countries, Britain ranks above the U.S. in most health measurements. Its citizens have a longer life expectancy and lower infant mortality, and the country has more acute-care hospital beds per capita and fewer deaths related to surgical or medical mishaps. Britain achieves these results while spending proportionally less on health care than the U.S. — about $2,500 per person in Britain, compared with $6,000 in the U.S. For these reasons, the World Health Organization (WHO) ranked Britain 18th in a global league table of health-care systems (the U.S. was ranked 37th). However, there are measures by which the U.S. outperforms Britain: for instance, the U.S. has lower cancer mortality rates.
3
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What's worse than the 'flu?
JackieDel
by JackieDel  9-28-2009    1
 The new 'flu jab can cause paralysis, death, seizures, temporary bleeding! Even though these reactions are supposed rare I'd prefer to take my chances with the flu, thanks anyway prof.
9
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Health Insurance Bankrupts Americans
JackieDel
by JackieDel  9-16-2009    4
 A Harvard study found that 50 percent of all bankruptcy filings were partly the result of medical expenses. Every 30 seconds in the United States someone files for bankruptcy in the aftermath of a serious health problem. Consider the plight of David: David had to stop working as a truck driver after he was diagnosed with kidney cancer and has since been struggling to pay for COBRA during the two-year Medicare waiting period. His wife, Gloria, is his full-time caregiver and cannot work outside the home, and the couple has had to use much of their savings and borrow from friends and family to pay for their COBRA premiums. David cashed in his 401K at a 24 percent loss so that they will be able to continue to pay the COBRA premium until he is eligible for Medicare. Gloria tried to apply for Medicaid, but she learned that their income is too high. "There is not any help for people like us. We are not considered poor enough, but we don't have the money to pay it on our own," Gloria sa
4
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Young Man Dies for Lack of Public Option
JackieDel
by JackieDel  9-9-2009   
 I want to tell you about my only sibling, my brother Eric De La Cruz.1 Diagnosed with Severe Dilated Cardiomyopathy five years ago and in need of a heart transplant, my brother Eric passed away far too early this July 4th. All because the health care insurance system in the United States is broken. You see, unlike most of us (but like millions of others), Eric couldn't get private insurance. His employer didn't offer it as a benefit. And his heart condition, while treatable, was a pre-existing condition that no private insurers would cover. Sadly, there was no affordable, public option to protect Eric. So he remained excluded from the basic right to life-saving treatment that all people deserve. Although a heart transplant would save him, without coverage, Eric's condition needlessly and slowly deteriorated. Continued at source....+ details of 'support health insurance reform' rallies around the US.
3
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The Five Biggest Lies in the Health Care Debate
JackieDel
by JackieDel  8-30-2009   
 No Remarks
2
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5 Myths About Health Care Around the World
JackieDel
by JackieDel  8-30-2009   
 A most revealing and informative article about US style health 'care' vs the rest of the industrialised world.
2
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How Health Care Reform Would Work: The Flowchart
JackieDel
by JackieDel  8-30-2009   
 No Remarks
5
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Want to Stop Cancer? You Can, Experts Say
JackieDel
by JackieDel  8-12-2009   
 "The data is pretty clear that we can make a significant drop in the cancer rate with these three changes," Collins said. "We can prevent about one-third of cancers with these changes. And if you add tobacco prevention, which reduces about 30 percent of cancers, over half of today's cancers could be prevented." Dr. Virginia Kaklamani, an oncologist who specializes in breast cancer at Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago, added that "increased weight increases the risk of cancer, and physical activity, regardless of weight, decreases breast cancer risk." The institute joined with the World Cancer Research Fund to release a report, Food, Nutrition, Physical Activity and the Prevention of Cancer: A Global Perspective, that was prepared by a team of international researchers who reviewed more than 7,000 studies on cancer.
1
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We Want the Public Option, a novel approach to online petitions
JackieDel
by JackieDel  6-24-2009   
 It's about time the taxes of US citizens was spent on health care instead of war.
3
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Why Unfettered Capitalism Is Bad for Your Diet
JackieDel
by JackieDel  5-30-2009   
 These are the companies that are trying to efficiently process tens of thousands of cows per day -- cows that have been lined up in Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs) and fed grain (more efficient than using land to feed them their natural diet of grass), pumped with hormones and antibiotics to keep them from dying, which means a glut on the market of cheap (antibiotic-filled) beef. And these are the companies that are creating the seeds -- those seeds that the farmer can't even save for fear of litigation -- to grow the crops that require the use of their pesticides and which produce a proliferation of fast food. Yes, efficiency is the bottom line in our current agricultural system. Not safety, not health, nor least of all, taste. No, for a corporation that is beholden first to it's shareholders, its all about the quickest way to get to the bottom line.
0
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Drinking from Plastic Bottles 'Increases Exposure to Gender-Bending Chemical'
JackieDel
by JackieDel  5-30-2009   
 BPA is also found in dentistry composites and sealants and in the lining of aluminium food and beverage cans.
4
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Bill Moyers: How Can We Expect an Industry That Profits from Disease and Sickness to Police Itself?p
JackieDel
by JackieDel  5-29-2009    1
 No Remarks
— end of the list —

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