Daily Dose

Daily Dose of Community – Superglu

Earlier today I found myself losing the “Zen” I’ve been working on in regard to work so I clicked the Firefox bookmarklet for my Superglu page, (it’s actually mine, Michelle’s & TW’s since our feeds all go into that one page), and from there I clicked the “Squeeze” button. And I just kept clicking the “Squeeze” button.

It was interesting to see what other people had added to their “sources” lists. There wasn’t much that was really interesting to me or that I hadn’t seen in the feeds I subscribe to through my aggregator.

Until, Athens, GA Bloggers! Cool way to create a community feed made up of individuals who have pretty much been doing their own thing. Athens is a cool town, (Michelle thinks she wants to live there when she grows up, though she’s not sure she ever wants to leave her moms. She’s a weird teenager), and this little group of bloggers gathering together on one Superglu page is cool.

Nancy White asked recently if Blog Carnivals are community indicators or catalysts – I’ve wondered the same thing. And now I’m pondering whether the gathering of Athens bloggers on Superglu is a community indicator or if Superglu is a community catalyst… Whatever this is, I like it. A lot.

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Daily Dose of Kids – Premature Babies

Today, November 15, is Prematurity Awareness Day – so get aware! Visit SHARE, Medline, iVillage (man I miss Parent Soup – I even miss Parentsplace, which is frightening) and WebMD.

Or, just click these links to SHARE and jump in quickly!

* Learn about the Preemie Act
* Join a Discussion
* Read Some Blogs
* Donate

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Daily Dose of Health Care – ER

My attempt at not so live blogging from the ER last week led me to some interesting thoughts and questions about health care in the US and the attitudes of people seeking health care in the US. Before I get to the first thought, let me give you some data about my emergency room experience…

I’ve been to emergency rooms more than 50 times in the last 40 years. I’ve been to emergency rooms in 6 states and 4 countries (including the US and two that some would consider “third world countries”). I’ve been to Department of Defense emergency rooms and “civillian” emergency rooms. I’ve been to the emergency room that spawned these thoughts and questions about 10 times and walked through it a good 100 times. I’ve been to the ER as a patient or a family member/friend of a patient. I’ve been to the ER for suicide attempts and kidney stones, for broken bones and lacerations, for burns and for ear infections, for tummy troubles and breathing treatments, for foreign objects where they ought not be and psychotic episodes and treatment after car accidents. I have emergency room experience.

I have never seen so many people ask the folks at “triage” how much longer it will be ’til they are seen. Nobody likes to wait 4 hours or 6 hours or 8 hours to be seen but folks, in the ER, it isn’t about how long you’ve waited it is about who arrives in worse shape than you are. When the dude or dudette at the desk says I don’t know, it could be six hours he/she isn’t saying that to cause you grief. The point is, if EMS brings in 4 more patients and they have yet another helicopter come in, then it could be six hours or 12 hours. There is simply NO WAY to predict the type of emergency that is going to walk in the door in the next five minutes.

I have never heard people rant at the top of their lungs about the quality of care being given the way I heard them rant on Tuesday night.

One woman called her husband’s doctor, who she happens to work for, and complained and the man was taken back immediately. He apparently had blood clots in his legs and was tired of sitting outside chain smoking while he waited for treatment.

Another woman, whose husband had a dislocated knee, called someone in the hospital to file a complaint. They had been waiting four hours. She had to go home and get pain meds for him to get through the wait. She then proceeded to lie to whoever she was talking to and said she was looking at dirty bandages on the floor of the waiting room – there were none. She said some old man in a wheel chair had a coat over his head and head been pushed to the side, forgotten about and could be dead for all she knew. Umm, he was a homeless guy taking a nap. Happily panhandling the parking lot an hour later. She said there were infants who had been there for hours, sick and dehydrated and could die, those infants were toddlers and were happily running all over the ER – no imminent signs of death at all. She then proceeded to tell the poor person on the phone the little tidbet that had gotten me so worked up on the first place…

This is America! This isn’t a third world country! We are being treated like we’re in a third world country! Americans deserve better health care than this!

Ummm, has this woman been to a third world country, much less visited the ER in one? I somehow doubt it. In fact I doubt anyone who was happily, and loudly, spouting that nonsense has been to one.

I’ve been to two Emergency Rooms in two different “third world countries” and I guarantee you the folks in those ERs would have gladly given up 6 hours of their lives to sit in our ER instead. Our ER with AC that works (too well), 6 televisions, enough seating that nobody sat on the floor or stood while they waited. Free telephones that work. Bathrooms inside, most of which actually have toilet paper – and a plumbing system that allows you to flush the paper. Vending machines. A nice woman from housekeeping, who had injured herself while working and was waiting just like we were for treatment, handing out blankets to anyone who wanted them.

And what is with the “Americans deserve better” crud? Better than what? Better than all of those things that I listed? I don’t get it, at all.

It’s an emergency room folks. That means people with emergencies are going to wander in and they are going to be seen ahead of you. I know the waiting stinks. I know you don’t feel well. I know your son has a big playoff game on Thursday and those broken ribs might keep him out of the game and you’re frustrated. I know your toddler is tired of waiting and so are you. But believe it or not, it isn’t all about you or about me. It isn’t about being treated like you’re in a third world country or about the disaster that is American health care. It’s about the nature of the emergency, plain and simple.

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Daily Dose of Personality – Punctuate

hyphen
You scored 38% Sociability and 58% Sophistication!
You are comfortable around others. While you don’t have to go out every
night, yet you take pride in being easy to get along with. This should
not, however, be misconstrued as believing (as many do) that you are
without subtlety. In fact, you have the power to inform the anal
retentive that, indeed, they are discussing an anal-retentive issue.
Who else can do that? Quotation marks intimidate you a little bit.
My test tracked 2 variables How you compared to other people your age and gender:

free online dating free online dating
You scored higher than 30% on Sociability
free online dating free online dating
You scored higher than 35% on Sophistication

Link: The Which Punctuation Mark Are You Test written by Gazda on Ok Cupid, home of the 32-Type Dating Test

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Daily Dose of Time Wasting – Blend Your Words

I had so much fun with this word blender and I only typed two little words. Over and over again. It felt good. And then I emailed it to my pal who is not working this week because she had surgery and because she’s having a fun vacation with my other pals who are not working. I hope it prepares her for the return to work life.

Now tell me, which words did you blend – and why? And how do you feel about Mrs Fields cookies? I’m not really a fan but next time I go to the mall (do we have a Mrs Fields in our mall???) I will buy some just because this thing made me smile. After. A. Long. Work. Day.

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Daily Dose of Emergency – Audioblogging

I’ve been saving a post of Nancy White’s where she compares audioblogging tools for a couple of weeks because I didn’t have time to click the darn things much less really think about the idea. I finally found time to fiddle with them over the weekend and audioblogger was down. I was frustrated. And then yesterday, around noon, I finally got the audioblogger version to load! Success! TW and I talked about the quality of the two clips and pondered ease of use and then I went back to work and TW went back to sleep.

I should have spent some more time setting it up to try for myself since I was unable to liveblog from the ER last night like I wanted to! If I had an audioblogger or audioacrobat account ready to go, I could have blogged my very interesting 14 hour experience in the ER!

I am setting up an audioblogger account today and an audioacrobat account today – well ok, not today because I have only had 2 hours of sleep in the last 36 hours and I still have 3 hours of work to get through but I am setting up these accounts so I’m prepared next time! All of that amazing blog material and no way to blog it! The pain! The agony!

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Daily Dose of Live Blogging – The ER

OK so I’m not live blogging because Blogger does not like my cell phone service. Let’s pretend this is live, ok? I promise I’ll post as soon as I get into a room with a connection…apparently it will be dial up yet again. I’d heard they had added a hotspot when they remodeled last here but it appears I heard incorrectly. Yet another reason for me to be disgruntled at having to spend a few days (or a week) in the hospital.

Now I am jumping the gun a bit. I don’t know for sure we will actually be dropped into a room but I have strong suspicions. TW has Crohn’s Disease. That’s a new diagnosis, until last month we thought TW had Ulcerative Colitis. UC has put us in the hospital twice, for 9 day stays both times. So I have experience with this, none of it good.

She’s been fighting it for awhile, but here we are, back in the ER. She tried to hit up the primary care doc for a diagnosis of “flu” or even “strep throat” but no luck. The symptoms didn’t match so I guess it’s a good thing the doc said “No way, hit the ER and see what the GI doc says.”

Now about the ER… it’s crowded. Really crowded. Lots of little kids, one of whom is very busy. She is visiting with everyone and her really young mama is a little annoying. The child is cute, the mom is ummm not. Let the child be cute or keep her corraled but you just can’t have it both ways in this type of situation. (My parenting advice from the ER, I know you appreciate this.) Another small child in a stroller, drinking soy milk from a carton, with a yukky looking gash on her forehead. The difference between the two children and the two parents is amazing. But that’s they way, isn’t it?

Have I mentioned we’ve been here for 45 minutes and have not yet been checked in by the financial folks over in the corner? It’s going to be an incredibly long night – and it’s Gilmore Girls night! We only watch two TV shows and GG is one of them. The one we most love to watch with Michelle (our 15 year old). Michelle is taping it for us but it won’t be the same, ya know? Instead of GG, we are stuck with ABC news at the moment. Arnold and the California elections and some Nascar thing. I know I live in the south and consider myself a southern woman but Nascar just doesn’t do it for me.

woohooo, TW just got called in for vitals check. Next stop, financial district! Progess, ain’t it grand?

I’ve spent a lot of time in ERs all over the world and it’s interesting how sometimes people look incredibly ill and other times there’s no obvious reason for them to be there. Tonight is an overwhelming look and feel of illness. Not good, for all of these people or for my s/o with the auto-immune disease. The worst place in the world for someone with an A/I Disease is the hospital, ya know?

This ER has absolutely no reading material. None. Not a pamphlet or a magazine or a children’s book or a Bible in site. There are magazine/pamphlet racks but nothing there. The little closed off room that use to be nice to go to for peace and quiet or to corral children in is gone. They’ve changed the traffic flow outside and that area was turned into the entrance. So no quiet spot. No benches where people use to sleep while they waited. No area where small children can sit on the floor and play without being in someone’s way. I hope they remedy both the magazine and quiet room issue.

Speaking of reading material, of the zillion people here, only my s/o has a book. No magazines in sight either. Too sick to read? Even the friends and family are too sick to read?

Something else new about this ER. After you have your vitals taken, you’re given one of those flashing beeper pager thingies like they give you at really busy restaurants. I’ve only heard one buzz since we’ve been here. Have I mentioned we’re going to be here for ages?

I wonder if TW would be troubled if I drove across the street, borrowed the Starbucks Wi-Fi and posted this real quick…and grabbed a quad venti caramel macchiato in the process… I’m sure it would be fine if I brought an extra one back, right? Oh wait, TW is sick and it won’t stay down (to put it nicely). Starbucks should not be so close and yet so far away.

I think I’ll mention those nice security folks who work in the ER. The woman I’ve spoken to the most seems to be off duty. She does “coroner duty” when necessary on all of the floors. Now that’s a tough job. She also handles suicide watches, I know about this from experience and I’ll share that with you another time. And of course there are the other types of disturbances that come into the ER and the folks who get injured while trying to avoid arrest. Anyway, the security staff here is good. One dude gives me the creeps and I don’t really know why. TW says he’s a nice guy so maybe it is/was just me and my frame of mind that evil night when I first saw him. The security folks just escorted an elderly woman in a wheelchair out with a 30 something biker babe-ish woman. Now that was interesting. Wonder what was up with that? The stories we could make up. I think people with writers block should come and sit in an ER for an hour or so. Storylines and character development would begin to flow… and might never stop.

A frantic man who needs a wheel chair for his wife. She looks ummm not so good. A very loud man with “a serious hand smash” (he’s putting a note on his car right now because he’s in the ten minute loading/unloading zone. I wonder what the note will say?). Character development, I’m telling you.

Remember when using a cell phone in a hospital was bad? When did that change? Did it at one time interfer with pace makers or something? Is that why you couldn’t use them? I’m not a big cell phone person. I should look that up.

Six hours? The receptionist woman just told someone it could be six hours til they are seen. Now there is yelling. Scarey – both the yelling and the potential six hours. Where is Dr K to talk about what’s wrong with healthcare in this country? Or in any country for that matter?

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