Health and Wellness

iMedix: Health Focused Social Network

I got an invite to iMedix today and joined right up. It’s a brand new health focused social network and when I say brand new, I mean it. They’re not even in Beta yet! And for an “alpha release” I was pretty impressed. Some of the functionality isn’t up and running yet (like adding links and adding friends) and in a couple of areas clicking the submit button meant I was trapped in a waiting for a response loop, but that happens to all sites once in awhile.

Right now there are only 9 communities in iMedix but they’re a solid 9 communities:

ADHD
Allergies
Anxiety
Asthma
Cholesterol
Depression
Diabetes
Obesity
Pregnancy

There’s one little feature that I really like about iMedix. I like it so much probably because it was on my “in my dreams” list for the place I used to work. You write a blog post and then you select which community you want your blog post to appear in. So if you belong to Depression, Pregnancy and Diabetes – you send your blog post to the community/communities it applies to. Or you can NOT send your blog post to any community at all – just leave it alone, in your space. Beautiful. I am guessing that when the share a link functionality is up, that it will work the same way. I hope so.

I’ve got 3 invites left, if you want one leave a comment and it’s yours.

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Revolution: Women’s Health

I just got off the phone with a group of bloggers, (Our Bodies, Our Blog, Women 4 Hope (Catherine also blogs at BlogHer, Well Soul, Women’s Health News), Cynthia from Don’t Gel Too Soon (and Revolution Health) and Sherry Marts, PHD from the Society for Women’s Health Research. The phone call was organized as part of the Revolution Health Online Health Fair. You should click that link and then roll your mouse over the little computer icons until you find a topic (or multiple topics) that interest you. Every time you click into a topic (once per day per person) Revolution Health will donate money to the organization featured in the Online Health Fair. So click. Or better yet, click the Society for Women’s Health Research icon (it’s at the bottom, they’re alphabetical) and support their work.

Now, about the phone call. Interesting stuff and I was lucky enough to be the first blogger to ask questions and lucked into getting 3 questions instead of just 2. Yes I am a lucky woman. (Too bad people don’t really win the lottery or I’d be sooo in there, wouldn’t I? heh)

My first question was about women being prescribed medications that may not (probably not) have been tested ON women before they were approved. It wasn’t until like 1993 that the FDA mandated drugs be tested ON women. So those drugs you’re taking… well… you figure it out.

My next question was more complicated and had to do with women who talk about having more chronic pain and more auto-immune flares at certain points in their menstrual cycle – and not finding research that indicates this DOES happen – and not being able to find doctors who believe it happens – and not getting specialized pain treatment because it does happen.

Last but not least, I asked about HIV/AIDS drug testing being done on women. We’re doing such a good job of preventing HIV/AIDS in gay men but in minority women it’s getting to be a very serious problem – and the HIV/AIDS drugs have not been well tested (if at all) on women because they’ve been traditionally a hard group to study (in the early years of drug treatment testing, the women who contracted HIV tended to be sex workers, IV drug users – folks hard to keep track of).

The other bloggers in the group asked questions about hormone replacement, funding for women’s health and HPV. A transcript and/or audio cast of the event will be available some time tomorrow and I’ll link it in this post when it’s up – and click here to listen.

Now go click the Revolution Health Online Health Fair icons today and for the next five days so Revolution Health can donate some of their “hard earned money” to your favorite cause(s).

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Some stuff

Alright Modest Mouse! (Not that I don’t like Joss Stone, but still, it’s Modest Mouse! Totally cool.)

I have a knitting question for you knitters, obviously since non-knitters like me wouldn’t know the answer. So. You know how people take reading material into the bathroom, if they’re going to be there awhile – heh – do y’all take your knitting in there with you?

I am not fond of the new HP cover. Too cartoony. The characters look “Edge Chronicle-like”.

I think sassymonkey really could get lucky with Ami McKay. Would y’all like to help me encourage her to give it a go?

Yesterday was Diabetes Alert Day. You didn’t miss it did you? I missed it here, and at Blogher, but managed to get it up at work. Not that anyone noticed. Diabetes does not seem to be the “hot disease” at the moment. Go Colorectal Cancer!

OK that’s enough stuff for now. I’ll be back later with a book post. Goodie!

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I’m pregnant!

Go ahead and congratulate me.

It’s the only explanation I can come up with for why I have had this weird queasy thing going on yesterday and today.  Then, out of the blue, I am craving Kentucky Fried Chicken.

A baby, cool! I was planning on adopting but this is much better. Now about that KFC… would it be wrong of me to end my boycott due to the Papal Fish Sandwich Blessing issue?

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I’m not transphobic

I’m definitely not transphobic.

And, while I do support women born women spaces, in some instances, this isn’t the problem either.

I simply do not like the transgendered monologue that has been added to the Vagina Monologues. It does absolutely NOTHING for me. It feels flat, uninspired and there is no passion in it. Ensler can do better and trans women deserve better.

Last year, I thought it was the multiple voices doing the monologue. This year, I’ve decided that’s not the problem. The monologue just plain stinks. Something called They Beat the Girl Out of My Boy… Or So They Tried should be a lot more passionate than it actually IS. I would really love to see the other trans monologues, surely they are better than this one.

Other than this little gripe, we enjoyed this year’s performance of the Vagina Monologues.

  • It was amusing having it at “our church”.
  • The crowd was too small.
  • The elderly man in front of us who told his wife very loudly during the Vagina Workshop that he was leaving was sad and amusing. (Why don’t people research these things before they attend? Why would he have agreed to go to something called the Vagina Monologues in the first place?)
  • Speaking of the Vagina Workshop – weird not hearing it with a British accent but I enjoyed the performance.
  • I was also pleasantly surprised by The Flood – except she flubbed her best line “Closed due to flooding” – she said “Due closed to flooding”, heh.
  • The tshirt is much better this year than last. It will look fabulous with Susie Bright’s “Clits Up” button. Now to get Michelle to wear it so I can take a photo.

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    Uhhh, sorry!

    I forgot to mention we are home from England.  We got home Monday evening.  And, I’m tired.  More importantly, I’m sick.  Like fever, sore throat, coughing sick.  I should be grateful to have fended it off ’til we got home…but I’m not.  I’m annoyed.  Sick and annoyed. Damn grouchy, too, in case you’re wondering.

    If you’re the customer service people at Music123, you’re probably aware of that grouchy bit.  But you should know that even if I wasn’t sick, I’d have been livid to discover you are not currently accepting your own gift cards and do not know when you might accept them in the future.  In fact, if I wasn’t sick, I’d probably still be on the phone with someone at your establishment.

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    Lost to the Patriarchy

    I thought for sure my mother was safe.  After almost 25 years of being divorced and a zillion years of living with K and no desire at all to bow to the patriarchy and re-marry, she went and did it.  She snuck off and married K yesterday.

    I should have known this was going to happen.  For the last six months she’s been making noises about marriage.  And everytime she made those noises I reminded her of the patriarchy.  I reminded her that if her granddaughters called and said "We’re thinking about getting married for health insurance…" she’d have said "NO! Don’t do it! Bad reason!" 

    Bah.

    She says she called last week and told me they had decided to do it.  She most certainly did not call me last week and tell me they had decided to do it.  I’d have taken down the pink flamingo flag in front and hung a black mourning flag up instead.  She did call and discuss the pros and cons of marriage with me.  But she did not specifically say "We have decided to tie the knot."

    HMPH.  She probably confused me with my damn sister – again.

    She also did not tell my brother.  But that is because my damn sister told her that he was off on a cruise.  Not that Mikey would have cared, he is part of the patriarchy after all and he bowed to it himself a few years ago after swearing for all of his adult life that he wasn’t going to get married.

    Grrr.  What is it with my siblings who swear they are never going to do this or that and then turn around and do it.  Oh wait, they are their mother’s children – since she always SWORE she would never get married again.

    Damn patriarchy.  Damn American healthcare system that encourages marriage in order to solve health insurance coverage issues. 

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    Why? Why NOT?

    So there’s a theme for this year’s Blog For Choice Day.  The theme is "why are you pro-choice"?  I think the simple answer to that would be another question – "why would I be anti-choice"?

    I wouldn’t be.  I couldn’t be.  It’s wrong for me to decide what’s right for YOUR body, what’s right for YOU.  I get to choose what’s right for me, you get to choose what’s right for you.  That’s it, end of story.  No shades of grey.  Not one.

    A few months ago, I was laying in bed with the laptop – probably reading blogs or writing a blog post – when I heard a knock at the door and a voice saying "Can I talk to you?"  I hate it when the big kids do that.  It’s never good news they want to share.  It always means something’s gone wrong, or there’s some drama they need to talk out.  I sighed.  I grumbled about hating it when they do that.  I got an apology but when I opened the door I saw the 1/2 child standing there looking like he’d lost his best friend.

    Someone he cares a lot about was pregnant.  He was sad and angry and confused and he wanted to make everything right.  He wanted to know if she could have an abortion – she’s under age and we live in the horrid "parental consent state" (I hate parentel consent laws.).  We discussed this young woman’s options and before I knew it – he was planning what she was going to do. 

    Hoooooooooold on a minute dude.  This is not your choice.  This is not your body.  This is not your life.  You did not even impregnate this girl and you’re thinking you have the right to make these decisions for her?  I am glad you want to HELP her.  I am glad you’ll do whatever it takes to make these things happen for her.  But dude, do you even know what she wants to do?  Because she has three options.  And SHE is the one who gets to choose.  Until you know what she chooses, you can’t be sitting here making plans. 

    It’s easy for even the most well-meaning, kind-hearted of people to take control – to take choice away – to think they know what’s best.  It’s far too easy.

    Yes, I’m pro-choice.  How could I be anything else?

    Blog for Choice Day - January 22, 2007

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