Monday, March 30, 2009

Insurers shun those taking certain meds


Miami Herald
BY JOHN DORSCHNER
March 30, 2009

How health insurers secretly blacklist those with certain ailments.

Saturday, March 21, 2009

22 members of Hawaii House of Representatives Sign Resolution asking FDA to Rescind Approval for Neurotoxic Aspartame


Hawaii takes seriously the ominous neurodegenerative effects of this commonly found artificial sweetener, found in Diet Cokes, Sugarless Gum, Equal, and hundreds of medications, despite its being metabolized as methanol and formaldehyde; you personally could write in support of this long overdue and obvious imperative to Margaret Hamburg, M.D., FDA Commissioner, 5400 Fisher's Lane, Rockville Md., or to commissioner@fda.gov.

http://www.opednews.com/articles/22-members-of-Hawaii-House-by-Stephen-Fox-090319-10.html

Thursday, March 12, 2009

What Obama Can Learn from European Healthcare


by Steven Hill
Huffington Post
March 9, 2009


Whether one looks at infant mortality, life expectancy, the number of physicians, hospital beds, medical errors or high out-of-pocket expenses, America underperforms to a shocking degree. Unlike single-payer Britain or Sweden, nations like France, Germany, Switzerland & Belgium have figured out a third way: the insurance companies are non-profits...

Dr. Quentin Young, Longtime Obama Confidante and Physician to MLK, Criticizes Admin’s Rejection of Single-Payer Healthcare



Democracy Now!
March 11, 2009

While the Obama administration claims “all options are on the table” for healthcare reform, it’s already rejected the solution favored by most Americans, including doctors: single-payer universal healthcare. We speak with Dr. Quentin Young, perhaps the most well-known single-payer advocate in America. He was the Rev. Martin Luther King’s doctor when he lived in Chicago and a longtime friend and ally of Barack Obama. But he was noticeably not invited to Obama’s White House healthcare summit last week...

Friday, March 6, 2009

What Makes Things Hazardous?


by Jourdan Rassás
Earth911.org

Household Hazardous Waste is any product that is discarded from a home or a similar source that contains volatile chemicals that are:

Ignitable: capable of burning or causing a fire
Corrosive: capable of eating away materials and destroying living tissue when contact occurs
Explosive and/or Reactive: capable of causing an explosion or releasing poisonous fumes when exposed to air, water or other chemicals
Toxic: poisonous, either immediately or over a long period of time
Radioactive: capable of damaging and destroying cells and chromosomal material
Some examples of HHW are used motor oil, oil-based paint, auto batteries, gasoline and pesticides. The term HHW refers specifically to those products used in and around the common household, not used for any industrial purpose. These products can be harmful to the environment if they are not disposed of properly, which means they should not be dumped down the drain, and empty or partially empty hazardous waste containers should not be thrown in the garbage. According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Americans generate 1.6 million tons of HHW per year. The average home alone can accumulate as much as 100 pounds of HHW in basements, garages and storage closets.