Heather and I are now officially consumers of green energy. Our electricity provider has invested in wind and solar power and we decided to support this investment by paying an average additional $1.77 per month to allocate all of our electricity usage to these environmentally friendly sources. Go green!
Friday, February 15, 2008
Green Power
Heather and I are now officially consumers of green energy. Our electricity provider has invested in wind and solar power and we decided to support this investment by paying an average additional $1.77 per month to allocate all of our electricity usage to these environmentally friendly sources. Go green!
Thursday, February 14, 2008
Too familiar?
Today, I became a bit more familiar with the human body, perhaps a little more familiar than I wanted. I had been worrying about this all week! We spent four hours delving into the intricate details of the female pelvic exam, and practicing the various skills until we mastered them. We practiced the breast exam, the bimanual pelvic, the speculum and pap exam, and the rectovaginal exam. I'm relieved it's over, and pleased with how much I learned and how effective it was to have the teaching assistants (who also play the role of patient) help us with the techniques. It's hard to believe, looking at that cervix, that a baby has passed through it when all you can fit into it is the tip of the pap-smear sampling brush. The female reproductive system is a complex system of organs whose communications and interactions are quite mysterious even to the best experts. I fear that section of pathophysiology more than any other! For now, I can merely appreciate, and observe, and understand the basic skills necessary to detect abnormal findings. And, be extremely grateful that there are women in this world who are brave enough to volunteer themselves to the hands of young, naive speculum-wielding medical students.
Tuesday, February 5, 2008
Miss. Obesity Bill Stepping on Toes, As Intended
A bill proposed by a Mississippi lawmaker to ban restaurants from serving food to obese customers has no chance of being approved - but this was never the lawmaker's goal in the first place.
Republican Rep. John Read of Gautier filed a bill asking that it be illegal for restaurants with more than five seats to serve people who are obese. Restaurants that failed to abide by the new law would have their permits revoked.
The real purpose of the bill: "I was trying to shed a little light on the number one problem in Mississippi." Read the rest of the article...
I agree with the direction this bill is headed, although denying people of their food would be like banning cigarettes from smokers, or alcohol from alcoholics. We need to shed light on obesity, much like we did on smoking when we learned that smoking causes cancer. A shift in our attitude toward obesity would help more people realize they need help to get over their addiction to food.
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