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Archive for the ‘Social Issues’ Category
By Lisa Collier Cool
Source: Yahoo! Health
I have a friend who will only eat short pasta, like penne. Another friend sticks to long pasta – linguini, spaghetti. I thought that was a bit bizarre until I read about Heather Hill, 39, whose diet consists entirely of French fries, pasta with butter or marinara sauce, vegetarian pizza, cooked broccoli, corn on the cob, and cakes and cookies without nuts.
Ms. Hill isn’t alone. New findings indicate that there may be hundreds, if not thousands, of adult picky eaters. To get a handle on the numbers, Duke University and the University of Pittsburgh have launched a national public registry of adult picky eaters. Respected publications like JAMA and Psychology Today are recognizing another new eating disorder, orthorexia, an obsession with healthy eating. That may not sound bad, as obsessions go, but those who carry good intentions too far can face serious risks.
Kristie Rutzel, 27, dropped to 68 pounds when she was in the grip of her fixation on healthy eating – at one point she ate little more than raw broccoli and cauliflower. Neither adult picky eating disorder nor orthorexia is included in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM), the American Psychiatric Association’s “bible” of mental disorders. Once a disorder is listed, treatment is often covered by insurance and it’s easier for researchers to get grants to study it. Here’s what we know so far:
- What is Adult Selective Eating? Like kids, adult picky eaters limit themselves to an extremely narrow range of foods. Unlike those who suffer from anorexia nervosa or bulimia, adult picky eaters are seemingly not worried about calorie counts or body image. But so far, researchers don’t know if adult picky eaters just haven’t outgrown childhood patterns or if their eating habits are a new twist on obsessive compulsive disorder. Some may be “supertasters,” with an abnormally acute sense of taste that turns them off certain foods. Many appear to have had unpleasant childhood associations with food.
- What is orthorexia? Identified in 1997 by Colorado physician Steven Bratman, MD, orthorexia is Latin for “correct eating.” Here, too, the focus isn’t on losing weight. Instead, sufferers increasingly restrict their diets to foods they consider pure, natural and healthful. Some researchers say that orthorexia may combine a touch of obsessive compulsive disorder with anxiety and warn that severely limited “healthy” diets may be a stepping stone to anorexia nervosa, the most severe – and potentially life-threatening – eating disorder.
What do they eat?
- Adult picky eaters: Food preferences tend to be bland, white or pale colored – plain pasta or cheese pizza are said to be common foods along with French fries and chicken fingers. Some picky eaters stick to foods with a common texture or taste.
- Orthorexics: Those affected may start by eliminating processed foods, anything with artificial colorings or flavorings as well as foods that have come into contact with pesticides. Beyond that, orthorexics may also shun caffeine, alcohol, sugar, salt, wheat and dairy foods. Some limit themselves to raw foods.
What are the risks?
- Health consequences: Limiting your diet to only a few foods – because you’re a picky eater or have a long list of foods you deem unhealthy – can lead to potentially dangerous nutritional deficiencies. At its most extreme, a diet limited to only a few foods perceived to be healthy is described as orthorexia nervosa and can lead to the same emaciation and health risks seen with anorexia nervosa.
- Social Isolation: Being an adult picky eater can take an enormous social toll. Out of embarrassment, these folks avoid dining with friends or co-workers. Heather Hill tries to hide her eating habits from her children for fear that they will pick them up. Going to extremes in an effort to eat only healthy foods can also be socially isolating and can undermine personal relationships.
How are these disorders treated?
- Adult Selective Eating: Techniques that have proven successful in treating kids who are picky eaters – learning assertiveness skills and systematically trying new foods – are being used on adults, but it’s still too soon to know whether they work.
- Orthorexia: Cognitive behavior therapy designed to change obsessive thought patterns regarding food is usually recommended.
Secret Santa spreads joy, disbelief in Kansas City
by the Associated Press
Source: Yahoo

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – Secret Santa II hit the streets Tuesday in a long-standing Kansas City tradition of handing out $100 bills — sometimes several at a time — to unsuspecting strangers in thrift stores, food pantries and shelters.
Some people gasped in surprise. Some wanted to know if the $100 bill the tall man in the red cap offered was fake. Others wept.
Secret Santa II has seen a lot of reactions since taking over where his mentor, Kansas City’s original Secret Santa, Larry Stewart, left off when he died in 2007 at age 58. Like Stewart, who gave away more than $1 million to strangers each December in mostly $100 bills, this Secret Santa prefers to stay anonymous.
A fake white beard taped to his face, Secret Santa II handed out about $10,000 in total Tuesday. Recipients included a police officer with terminal cancer, a homeless man pushing a rickety old shopping cart, an 81-year-old woman who had recently told her 27 grandchildren she wouldn’t be able to afford any Christmas gifts, and Bernadette Turner, a 32-year-old unemployed mother of two.
“It’s hard to come by,” Turner said looking in disbelief at the $200 Secret Santa had given her.
Then one of Santa’s “elves”, another tall man in a red cap, sidled up to next to Turner, asked a few questions, and handed her an additional $100. Turner, whose children are 3 and 8, was overcome.
“I can only afford one gift for each child. But now ….” she said, wiping tears from her cheeks and reaching out for a hug.
“Do you believe in Santa Claus?” Capt. Ray Wynn of the Kansas City, Mo., Fire Department, asked from a few feet away. Wynn had followed Stewart on many “sleigh rides” around the country and now follows this Secret Santa, providing stories, memories and amusing sound effects.
“I do now,” Turner said. “I do now.”
Secret Santa II took over from Stewart about the time the recession hit and the economy went into a tailspin. Like Stewart, this Secret Santa doesn’t talk about his own finances, where those $100 bills come from and if — like for so many people now — they’ve been harder to come by.
Come December, he just fills his pockets with money, dons his red cap and heads out looking for people to make really happy.
He will likely hand out about $40,000 this December. He says he’ll go “till the money runs out.”
“The recession, unemployment. This is the time you don’t want to stop. You don’t want to back off,” he said.
He walked up to Peggy Potter, 59, of Kansas City, Kan., who was looking at some framed prints at a thrift store. He made some small talk, put his arm around her and within minutes she was crying. Her son died about a year and a half ago. Her husband died in July and her daughter died soon after that.
“I’m just … today’s been a rough day for me, just thinking about my loved ones,” she said. “I’ve been having a hard time paying for all the funerals.”
Santa gave her $200, listened more, hugged her, and told her the poster she was holding had special meaning. It was a photo of two hands, one large, one small. Words printed at the bottom could have been written by Secret Santa, the original or the current one.
It said: “Kindness in giving creates love.”
by Parija Kavilanz
Source: Yahoo
Fraud experts say health insurance scams are on the rise as criminals quickly exploit consumers’ confusion about how the new health care law changes their insurance coverage.
Most of the schemes are poorly constructed, using the pretext of reform. “So far there’s no major criminal organization behind them,” said James Quiggle, spokesman for non-profit group Coalition Against Insurance Fraud.
But Quiggle is concerned that as more of the provisions mandated by the new law are phased in over the next four years, these scams “could grow to become an all-encompassing tsunami.”
The government has taken note. Earlier this year, Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Kathleen Sebelius warned state insurance commissioners about new schemes to sell bogus insurance policies.
Last week, HHS announced grants to states to strengthen ongoing efforts to protect consumers from some of the worst insurance industry practices.
Consumers beware: Sally Hurme, who handles consumer fraud issues at AARP, said seniors are especially vulnerable to these new scams. “We’re making a concerted effort to get the word out to our 40 million members,” she said.
But seniors aren’t the only targets. People who buy insurance out of pocket — unemployed individuals, underinsured individuals, as well as individuals who do not get dependent coverage through their work — are also vulnerable, said Lou Saccocio, head of the National Health-Care Anti-Fraud Association, whose members include insurers, law enforcement and regulatory agencies.
Saccocio, citing anecdotal information, said the most common scams involve selling fake health plans, fraudulent medical discount plans and Medicare rebate checks scams.
Here’s what to watch out for:
Phantom government coverage: Scammers, claiming they represent the government, go door-to-door selling fake policies. “These crooks tell people without insurance that the law requires them to buy a policy immediately,” said Quiggle. “They also say there’s a limited enrollment period to sign up.”
Both claims are false. There is no enrollment period in the individual market. And the law gives uninsured individuals until 2014 to buy coverage before having to pay a penalty.
Fraudulent discount plans: Crooks are taking advantage of heightened concerns about health insurance costs to sell people “discount plans” disguised as insurance plans, said Kim Holland, Oklahoma’s insurance commissioner.
Holland said these medical discount plans are not insurance policies. These plans only provide discounts on some medical services. The Federal Trade Commission said 24 states have filed 54 lawsuits this year to stop this deceptive practice.
“Some states have outlawed these plans,” said Holland.
$250 Medicare rebate scam: For beneficiaries who’ve fallen into the prescription-drug coverage gap known as the “doughnut hole,” the law created a program this year where the government mails them a $250 check to cover the gap.
Quiggle said scammers are exploiting this opportunity by calling up seniors, asking for their Social Security and Medicare beneficiary numbers, and promising to expedite the checks.
The crooks will then use the information to bill Medicare for false services.
AARP’s Hurme said the group has also become aware of a Medicare card scam. “Scammers are telling seniors that because of the changes in the law, they will have to send them a new card,” she said. And they ask for their personal information.
“This is blatant identity theft,” Hume added.
Peter Ashkenaz, spokesman for the Center for Medicare & Medicare Services, said the agency was aware of anecdotal reports of such scams.
“We have aggressive efforts in place to educate beneficiaries that they do not need to do anything to get the $250 rebate checks,” he said.
How to protect yourself
As key provisions of the health care law continue to be phased in, scammers will try to take advantage of consumers who aren’t aware of the new changes.
Coming up in January, Medicare beneficiaries will not have to pay co-pays on preventive services. Ashkenaz said scammers might try to exploit that change.
Experts stress the need for consumers to educate themselves about the new law. The National Association of Insurance Commissioners also offered these tips on how to avoid being a victim.
Beware of fax, email, telephone poll solicitations: Be especially suspicious of solicitations that are blasted to consumers through these means.
Check if insurer is legit: Don’t give out any personal information such as your Social Security numbers or bank information until you verify with your state insurance department that the insurer and agent are licensed to write insurance in your state.
Keep paperwork: Ask for copies of all of the paperwork you sign. Keep a copy of the payment receipt or check for your initial premium payment.
30-day deadline: Call the insurer if you don’t receive a copy of your insurance policy outlining your coverage within 30 days of your purchase.
Medicare beneficiaries: If you are approached to buy any kind of medical insurance package, do not give any personal information to anyone you don’t know.
Additionally, Hurme said the AARP launched a major campaign called “Fight Health care Fraud” in September to educate seniors.
“Seniors can get information on our website,” she said. “We’re also training volunteers to go to senior centers in various states to educate the community.”
Source: Yahoo
WASHINGTON (AFP) – Hiding the TV remote and games console controller is a good thing to do to kids if it’s the only way to limit the time they spend in front of a screen, according to a study published Monday.
The study, published in the US journal Pediatrics, found that kids who spend hours each day in front of the TV or games console have more psychological difficulties like problems relating to peers, emotional issues, hyperactivity or conduct challenges, than kids who don’t.
And contrary to what earlier studies have indicated, the negative impact of screen time was not remedied by increasing a child’s physical activity levels, says the study conducted by researchers from the University of Bristol in Britain.
The researchers got 1,013 children between the ages of 10 and 11 to self-report average daily hours spent watching television or playing — not doing homework — on a computer. Responses ranged from zero to around five hours per day.
The children also completed a 25-point questionnaire to assess their psychological state, and the time they spent in moderate to vigorous activity was measured using a device called an accelerometer, which was worn around the waist for seven days.
The researchers found that children who spent two hours or more a day watching television or playing on a computer were more likely to get high scores on the questionnaire, indicating they had more psychological difficulties than kids who did not spend a lot of time in front of a screen.
Even children who were physically active but spent more than two hours a day in front of a screen were at increased risk of psychological difficulties, indicating that screen time might be the chief culprit.
Earlier studies have found that while more time spent in front of a screen led to lower well-being, physical activity improved one’s state of mind. That led researchers to believe that upping physical activity levels could counteract the negative impact of watching TV or playing on the computer.
And many parents and children think that spending a lot of time on the computer or in front of the television is OK if it’s part of a “balanced lifestyle”, the study in Pediatrics says.
“Excessive use of electronic media is not a concern if children are physically active,” the study says.
But its findings indicate that might not be the case, and the researchers advise parents to limit their children’s computer use and TV viewing time to ensure their “optimal well-being.”
Lax Practices Found at Same-Day Surgery Centers
Excerpted from, “Lax Practices Found at Same-Day Surgery Centers” The New York Times. June 8, 2010–A new federal study finds many same-day surgery centers have serious problems with infection control. Failures to wash hands, wear gloves and clean blood glucose meters were among the reported breaches. The findings, appearing in Wednesday’s Journal of the American Medical Association, suggest that lax anti-infection practices may pervade the nation’s more-than-5,000 outpatient centers, experts said. In the study, state inspectors visited 68 centers in Maryland, North Carolina and Oklahoma. The study found that 67 percent of the centers, which perform such procedures as colonoscopies and esophagus examinations, had at least one lapse in infection control and that 57 percent were cited for deficiencies. Inspections were not announced ahead of time, but staff members were notified w! hen inspectors arrived. The study did not look at whether any of the lapses actually led to infections in patients.
CMDA Member Mark McQuain, MD: “Years ago I attended a presentation, a pilot program by an insurance company to show off a new tool called ‘Utilization Review’. The UR resulted in altering the doctor’s treatment plan 27% of the time. I asked whether there was a benefit to the patient due to that alteration. I was informed that outcome data was not collected.
This JAMA study reviewed a CMS pilot program of an infection control audit tool designed to assess Ambulatory Surgery Centers (ASC) infection control. This previously untested tool identified an increased number of ‘lapses’ in ASC infection control compared to previous surveys. CMS has subsequently incorporated this tool into its ‘Interpretive Guidelines for Ambulatory Surgical Centers’. However, the JAMA article correctly points out several problems with interpreting the pilot study. The most concerning was that data related to outcomes or numbers of actual hospital acquired infections linked to the ‘lapses’ was not collected. The tool appears to be a more sensitive collector of data but the data collected is potentially ambiguous.
It should go without saying that physicians and nurses want to provide the very best medical care for their patients. Developing and following policies that actually ensure reduced infection rates can help to provide that level of excellent care. But policies are tools and not ends in themselves. We need to make sure that any assessment of our practice of medicine always includes some measure of the actual medical care provided and not just a measure of the policies that assist in delivering that care.”
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