Gazette.Net: Gail Ewing: Winning over patients

A 10-minute wait to see a health care professional at the St. Joseph Medical Center Emergency Room Hold on Now theres only a three-minute wait.

Thats the news updated every 15 minutes on the medical centers website and available as an application on your phone.

With routine five- and six-hour waits in some ERs around the state, this is amazing.

Vivienne Stearns Elliott, media relations officer for St. Josephs, says, Weve seen greater patient satisfaction. We also hear, I drove here from Bel Air or the I-83 corridor because of the wait time.

People do seem to respond to the lure of a minimal wait time when they have just broken an arm or had some other affliction that needs immediate attention but does not require an ambulance response.

Across the country from San Jose, Calif., to Fort Lauderdale, Fla., to right here at St. Josephs in Towson hospitals are working to reduce the time a patient has to wait to be seen in the emergency room.

They are also hyping their success through electronic billboards, TV, radio and newspaper advertisements and phone apps.

Whats going on? Is it something beyond wait times?

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services issued a report Monday showing that growth in health care spending in the United States experienced historically low rates in 2009 and 2010. The reports summary highlights the effects of health care reform in reducing costs and, therefore, the need to spend. It also notes that hospital spending by private health insurance companies is greatly reduced.

The CMS recognizes that something else is happening, too. As reported in the January issue of the journal Health Affairs, CMS economist Anne Martin says, Medical goods and services are generally viewed as necessities, but the recession led consumers to be a lot more cautious about using them. High unemployment, loss of private health insurance, lower household income and increased costs to the consumer are cited.

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Gazette.Net: Gail Ewing: Winning over patients

Why Health Insurance is Not the Same Thing as Health Care

For most people in the health policy community, the word “coverage” carries a certain emotional power. People without health insurance coverage, we believe, are one bad break away from disability and destitution. Hence, many politicians, researchers, and activists believe that expanding coverage is more important than any other policy goal. But not all health insurance is created equal. Indeed ...

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Why Health Insurance is Not the Same Thing as Health Care

Freedom Flight send-off gets emotional

AMES, Iowa

Some veterans from World War II, the Korean War and the Vietnam War got the attention and recognition that many people felt was long overdue on Sunday.

Nearly 150 Story County veterans are preparing to go on a Freedom Flight on Tuesday. Freedom Flight is a program that recognizes veterans by flying them to Washington to see the Veterans Memorial.

"As a Vietnam veteran, I think it's time. They need to recognize us," said Bill Hobbs, "There are a lot of opinions about that war, and we went to serve our country, and we felt like we did."

Friends, Family and fellow veterans gathered at Ames City Hall for a send-off. The veterans piled out of coach buses, donning bright yellow Freedom Flight jackets. They were ushered inside where a program thanked them for their service to the country.

Korean War veteran Lars Tjelta choked up thinking about what this means to him. When he came home from the war, he said few people acknowledged his service.

"My parents met me, my sister and brother and a girlfriend I had. That's all. People I worked for and everything didn't even know I had been gone," Tjelta said.

The veterans will leave Story County at 4 a.m. Tuesday, and they'll return about midnight. The trip costs about $95,000, raised by individual donors.

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Freedom Flight send-off gets emotional

FREEDOM FLIGHT: 140 Veterans Head To Washington D.C.

Decades ago, veterans from the Vietnam War, Korean War, and World War II risked their lives for their country.

Sunday, they received some recognition for their efforts.

Organizers of the Story County Freedom Flight say its been a long time coming.

We cant change what happened 70, 60, 40 years ago, but we can change what happens now and give them the welcome home they should have gotten many years ago, said Doug Bishop, the coordinator for the Story County Freedom Flight.

On Tuesday, 140 veterans from Story County will board a flight to Washington D.C. where theyll view monuments honoring our armed forces.

Its an area thats familiar to Steve Collis. Hes a Vietnam Army veteran who has traveled to the capitol before.

Its going to be a wide variety of emotions. Its a moving thing. Its a moving experience, said Collis.

The trip came to life thanks to volunteers and donations from local businesses.

Over four months, they raised $95,000 dollars to give soldiers a chance to reflect on their military service.

Those same volunteers organized a send-off ceremony.

Excerpt from:

FREEDOM FLIGHT: 140 Veterans Head To Washington D.C.

Freedom's Woodard commits to Georgetown

By BILL WARD | TBO.com Published: October 14, 2012 Updated: October 14, 2012 - 12:01 PM

Freedom senior Faith Woodard, the Tampa Tribune's two-time Female Athlete of the Year and an all-Hillsborough County performer in basketball and track and field, made a verbal commitment to Georgetown University following her visit to the historic school this weekend in Washington, D.C.

Woodard made the commitment to the Hoyas' basketball program, a member of the Big East Conference, after experiencing the school's Midnight Madness session Friday night. She said her decision was strongly influenced by the school's academic tradition and location, as well as the reputation of a basketball program that has produced many NBA players. Founded in 1789, Georgetown is the oldest Jesuit and Catholic university in the United States.

''I knew Georgetown was a great school and a great opportunity but coming up here and seeing the campus just solidified everything I thought,'' Woodard said. ''I knew it was Georgetown and USF and it was a really, really tough decision but it came down to Georgetown and the education I can get here.''

''When I saw the Washington Monument, the White House, the memorials -- it was breathtaking. I'm saying to myself 'I'm in Washington, D.C. and the opportunities and connections you can make here are amazing.' I was so excited to be in the midst of that history, it pretty much sealed the deal for me. I'm extremely happy about my decision and relieved I've made it, too.''

The 6-foot-2 Woodard recently transferred to Freedom from Riverview. Last season at Riverview, Woodard was the Sharks' leading scorer and rebounder with 21 points and 11 boards per game. She had more than a dozen other Division offers besides Georgetown and USF, including the University of Southern California and UCF.

After earning first team all-county honors in basketball, Woodard went straight to the track for Riverview. There, she qualified for the Class 4A state finals in four events. There, she won the high jump at 5-8 and placed sixth in 400-meter in 56.74 seconds. Her father, Sterlin Woodard, told the Tampa Tribune his daughter will also compete in the high jump for Georgetown.

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Freedom's Woodard commits to Georgetown

Freedom's Woodard commits to Georgetown basketball

By BILL WARD | TBO.com Published: October 14, 2012 Updated: October 14, 2012 - 12:30 PM

TAMPA Freedom senior Faith Woodard, the Tampa Tribune's two-time Female Athlete of the Year and an all-Hillsborough County performer in basketball and track and field, made a verbal commitment to Georgetown University following her visit to the historic school this weekend in Washington, D.C.

Woodard made the commitment to the Hoyas' basketball program, a member of the Big East Conference, after experiencing the school's Midnight Madness session Friday night. She said her decision was strongly influenced by the school's academic tradition and location, as well as the reputation of a basketball program that has produced many NBA players. Founded in 1789, Georgetown is the oldest Jesuit and Catholic university in the United States.

''I knew Georgetown was a great school and a great opportunity but coming up here and seeing the campusjust solidified everything I thought,'' Woodard said. ''I knew it was Georgetown and USF and it was a really, really tough decision but it came down to Georgetown and the education I can get here.''

''When I saw the Washington Monument, the White House, the memorials it was breathtaking. I'm saying to myself 'I'm in Washington, D.C., and the opportunities and connections you can make here are amazing.' I was so excited to be in the midst of that history, it pretty much sealed the deal for me. I'm extremely happy about my decision and relieved I've made it, too.''

The 6-foot-2 Woodard recently transferred to Freedom from Riverview. Last season at Riverview, Woodard was the Sharks' leading scorer and rebounder with 21 points and 11 boards per game. She had more than a dozen other Division offers besides Georgetown and USF, including the University of Southern California and the University of Central Florida.

After earning first team all-county honors in basketball, Woodard went straight to the track for Riverview. There, she qualified for the Class 4A state finals in four events. There, she won the high jump at 5-8 and placed sixth in 400-meter in 56.74 seconds. Woodard's father, Sterlin Woodard, says his daughter will compete in the high jump for the Hoyas' track team.

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Freedom's Woodard commits to Georgetown basketball

Freedom Riders Park has Ala. groundbreaking

A groundbreaking ceremony will be held next week in Alabama to commemorate the location where an iconic Freedom Riders bus was burned more than 50 years ago.

On May 14, 1961, on a trip designed to test a Supreme Court decision banning segregation interstate bus segregation, seven members of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) departed from Atlanta on a Greyhound bus. An angry white mob met the bus at a station in Anniston, Ala., where its tires were slashed and windows were shattered. The bus driver later stopped to change a tire and the bus was set on fire as passengers were attacked as they fled. Related attacks in Birmingham drew national and international headlines, leading to a crush of new Freedom Riders, many of whom were jailed.

It was an event that fueled the civil rights movement in a very positive way, said Pete Conroy, co-chair of Freedom Riders Park. It was a bad day that created a more positive future.

The parks design has yet to be finalized, but its four-plus acres on Highway 202 near Anniston between Atlanta and Birmingham, Ala., will contain the exact location where the bus was burned, changing the course of the nations civil rights movement.

This is going to be an outdoor park focusing on this piece of the puzzle, Conroy said. The tone will be entirely positive.

Freedom Rider Bill Harbour, one of the first to exit a bus in Montgomery, where he reportedly encountered a mob of 200 people wielding pipes and baseball bats, survived the riots but saw his life changed forever, beginning with his expulsion from Tennessee State University.

This will be a place for education, contemplation and reflection that shows how a bad event triggered good things, unity and wonderful partnerships, Harbour said in a statement.

The two-part event, which is free and open to the public, will also feature musical and guest presentations. Other Freedom Riders, including Charles Person and Hank Thomas, will also be on hand, as will Janie Forsythe McKinney, who, as a young girl, brought water to Thomas as he fled a burning bus.

The event will continue later that evening at Jacksonville State Universitys McClellan Center, where opera singer K.B. Solomon will present a tribute to singer-civil rights activist Paul Robeson.

Im so pleased to have the opportunity to visit my Anniston home, experience the excitement of a new unity and perform to what is sure to be my favorite audience ever, Solomon said in a statement.

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Freedom Riders Park has Ala. groundbreaking

Students see need to protect eco system

137 species were being destroyed every day due to deforestation, and it was estimated that 10 per cent of the existing species would get extinct by 2050 if the ecosystem was not maintained

Students of Rajiv Gandhi University of Knowledge Technologies (RGUKT) have appealed to people to stop destroying forests and natural bodies, and conserve wildlife.

The students, through Power-Point presentations, explained about the threat to mankind and other species owing to indiscriminate exploitation of natural resources, use of pesticides and insecticides, and release of toxic gases into air.

Nuzvid RGUKT Director Ibrahim Khan said following instructions from the Higher Education Department, the institute management organised seminars and debates on Biodiversity and conservation of wildlife on Saturday.

Budding engineers stated that 137 species were being destroyed every day due to deforestation, and it was estimated that 10 per cent of the existing species would get extinct by 2050 if the ecosystem was not maintained.

In a debate, students P. Lavanya and D. John Kiran of PUC detailed how the flora and fauna was being killed in rivers and sea due to release of chemicals and treated water by some industries into canals and rivers. Another student P. Vennela urged people to stop using polythene and plastic material and encourage the use of cotton and jute bags to stop groundwater pollution.

She appealed to the residents to conserve rainwater to increase the groundwater table.

Prof. Khan suggested to the students to work out how ecology was being destroyed in the rural areas during Dasara vacation. He asked the youngsters to explain to the villagers about the consequences of environment pollution.

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Students see need to protect eco system

Letters: school assessment, clean beaches, medical pot and more

A half-full result for countys schools

In response to County schools get dueling report cards (Oct. 12): Even though we are moving in the right direction in terms of the Academic Performance Index Of San Diego Countys 743 schools, 57 percent earned a minimum API score of 800 that still means that 43 percent are below the target. We have lots more work to do.

The U-T encourages community dialogue on important public matters and welcomes letters to the editor. To enable us to publish as many letters as possible, please be aware that lengthy letters might reduce the chances for publication. All letters are subject to editing for accuracy, space, grammar, clarity or other reasons. It is our policy to publish letters supporting or opposing a particular issue in a ratio reflecting the number received on each side. Letters must include a full name, community of residence and a daytime telephone number, though the phone number will not be published.

Furthermore, I was troubled by the two pictures taken at Standley Middle School. On the front page of the paper a teacher is shown gazing over the shoulders of two students while holding her cup of coffee. The second picture, on Page A10 shows the American flag hanging at equal height and alongside the Canadian and another flag. Linda Parker, Kensington

[Thursday] was the first day of rain in some time in our city, and a visit to our coast, particularly a beach where the sewer meets the surf, would have provided the visitor with a disgusting odor, creating almost a gag reaction. Its clear why our waters are unsafe to be in for days if not weeks after a rain.

This really has to change.

Our city has a long list of needs, far longer then our present political candidates and office holders are willing to address. While our present, mayoral candidates argue over whether to use our growing hotel tax (TOT) for better pensions or a larger convention center, here is hoping that the people of San Diego will demand [the TOT] be used to clean our beaches and bays, making them safe for our families and our tourists. Peter Q. Davis, La Jolla

Jan Goldsmiths commentary (Legalizing medical marijuana properly, Opinion, Oct. 11) is skewered with misleading facts and a looks good on paper federal solution to pot by requiring weed be sold to only people who are dying. Really? What about the 5,000-plus remainder of us who arent seriously ill or hospice bound? Do you think the 5,000-plus are going to stop smoking weed? Or will they revert back to the past of the street distribution network?

How could someone with an education in law enforcement and politics be so obtuse and I mean imperceptive? Really. His is no solution. There will still be have and have-nots with marijuana. Nothing will change, except crime will go up. Kirk Perry, Cardiff

It was disturbing to read Mistaken identity, friendly fire in border agents death (Oct. 8). It said that a sensor was set off and that officers responded from different sides. One officer shot the other, and the other officer killed him.

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Letters: school assessment, clean beaches, medical pot and more

India presents growing opportunity for Canada's aerospace sector: trade advocate

By Ross Marowits, The Canadian Press

MONTREAL - Canada's aerospace sector can create jobs at home by taking advantage of India's modernization and recent moves to liberalize its foreign ownership restrictions, says the head of the Canada-India Business Council.

The world's most populated democracy has been growing in the shadows of fellow Asian giant China and other regional powers. But with India investing billions of dollars a year in infrastructure, the country is expected to jump to become a top five aerospace country by 2020.

"I think there is a real opportunity for us," council president Rana Sarkar said in an interview from Toronto.

"They're not going to go with one supplier, they're going to go with a syndicate of suppliers and it's for us to be in that mix is an important thing."

Canadas aerospace and space sectors generate annual revenues of over $22 billion and employ about 80,000 Canadians in more than 400 firms across the country. Companies such as Bombardier (TSX:BBD-B.TO - News) and CAE Inc. (TSX:CAE.TO - News), along with engineering and construction firms are already pushing to take advantage of the growing demand for new aircraft, pilot training and airport construction.

But more potential remains untapped.

"In virtually every sector in the aviation business, this is sort of like the 1950s in North America. You're starting to see just an arithmetic growth," he said.

The opportunity could total $1 trillion. And even though Canada's share will be small, it's still significant compared to where Canada's sector has been historically, Sarkar said.

Canadian exports to India increased by 29 per cent last year to nearly $2.6 billion, with aircraft and spacecraft being the fourth-largest category accounting for almost nine per cent of total exports. Overall bilateral trade totalled $5.1 billion but is targeted to reach $15 billion by 2015.

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India presents growing opportunity for Canada's aerospace sector: trade advocate

Inland Northwest aerospace poised for takeoff – Sun, 14 Oct 2012 PST

October 14, 2012 in City, Idaho Companies are prepping for worldwide industrygrowth

Technician Jason Rice works on a Pratt & Whitney 127 turboprop engine at Empire Aerospace in Hayden on Oct.5. (Full-size photo)(All photos)

A growing cluster of aerospace companies in the Inland Northwest is reaping the rewards of a global surge in aircraftproduction.

Its also setting the table for a main course that could nourish the economy much like health care and education dotoday.

The ultimate prize would be an assembly or manufacturing plant employing a thousand or more workers. Its not a pipe dream when one considers the foundation in place in Spokane County and North Idaho, economic development leaderssay.

I think we are on the precipice of a real advance, said Rich Hadley, president and CEO of Greater SpokaneIncorporated.

In Spokane County alone, more than 80 direct and indirect suppliers for the aerospace industry employ more than 8,000 people, GSI officialsestimate.

North Idaho is building an aerospace cluster of its own, with three dozen companies employing about 650, state officials say. And North Idaho College recently received a $2.97million federal grant to train people for aerospacework.

The region can tout an attractive workforce size, lower labor costs than the Puget Sound area, new investment in education and training, large chunks of land ready for development, airports eager to court new business, and growing collaboration between establishedcompanies.

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Inland Northwest aerospace poised for takeoff - Sun, 14 Oct 2012 PST

New DNA hunt for killer of Dutch schoolgirl

The Irish Times - Monday, October 15, 2012

PETER CLUSKEY in The Hague

DUTCH police have carried out the biggest DNA sweep in the history of the Netherlands, taking samples from more than 6,500 men in 12 separate villages, in a renewed attempt to solve the countrys most infamous murder that of 16-year-old schoolgirl Marianne Vaatstra, in 1999.

The DNA sampling was completed on Thursday, and police said at the weekend that they had successfully collected samples from 89 per cent of the 7,300 men still living within a five-mile radius of the meadow where Vaatstras body was dumped 14 years ago.

The schoolgirls age and the particularly gruesome nature of the murder she was raped, strangled and had her throat cut caused revulsion in the Netherlands. As a result there have been repeated attempts over the years to find her killer, most recently in 2007 using 3D technology.

The department of justice has refused on a number of occasions to give permission for such a wide sweep, but in June it relented on the grounds that DNA testing has become much more sophisticated and that police say they may have some of the killers DNA, which was discovered at the scene.

Hopes of a breakthrough now centre on a Playboy cigarette lighter found in the grass near the victims body in the field in Veenklooster, in the northern province of Friesland.

DNA found on the lighter, which was bought in a local shop, matches DNA found on the dead girls body and police hope it may still lead them to someone closely related to the killer.

One of the most controversial aspects of this murder case in 1999 was that, because the body was found near a centre for asylum seekers, the focus of the investigation and of local anger rapidly became the refugees.

An Iraqi who had recently left the camp was detained in the UK, while an Afghan was detained in Turkey. Both voluntarily gave DNA samples and were ruled out.

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New DNA hunt for killer of Dutch schoolgirl

Posted in DNA

DNA 'clears magnate of kidnapping'

THE owner of Argentina's powerful Clarin media group wants kidnapping charges dropped after DNA tests failed to link her adopted children to those stolen during the country's 1976-1983 "dirty war," her newspaper has reported.

The request, filed on Friday, comes after DNA samples submitted by the two adult children of Ernestina Herrera de Noble showed no matches with a DNA data bank of relatives of those who disappeared during the dictatorship.

Some 30,000 people vanished during the military's war on leftist activists.

The Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo, which represents female relatives of dictatorship-era victims, alleges that some 500 babies were stolen from those who disappeared - and then were adopted by pro-junta families.

Of those, only 107 have been identified.

The kidnapping case against Herrera de Noble was originally filed in 2001, and, after years of legal manoeuvering, a court ordered Marcela and Felipe Noble Herrera to submit to the DNA testing.

"There is no more cross-checking to do," attorney Gabriel Cavallo told the daily Clarin.

The case should be closed because "the experts have already determined that neither Felipe nor Marcela are the children of people who disappeared during the dictatorship," Mr Cavallo said.

But the Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo were not ready to admit defeat.

The group has long suspected the Noble Herrera children, both born in 1976, were kidnapped. It says the data bank is being still being updated because many people did not know that their daughters or daughters-in-law were pregnant at the time they vanished.

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DNA 'clears magnate of kidnapping'

Posted in DNA

Biology Systems Engineering nabs grant

WSU researchers will examine food safety following a grant received by the Department of Biology Systems Engineering.

The department was recently awarded the $238,500 grant from the National Needs Fellowship to further research and train doctoral students to promote environmentally friendly means of food production, processing and storing.

The grant will allow three WSU doctoral students to acquire proper training for developing positive food engineering techniques and technologies. They will work with both corporations and U.S. federal agencies to further their studies.

This is a very important grant that both recognizes ground-breaking research in food safety and the need to educate a new generation of leaders in this area, said Howard Grimes, vice president for research and dean of the WSU graduate school.

The new grant will be used to further develop solutions for the constant conflict between providing a large enough food supply for an increasing population as well as meeting the crisis for new energy and environmental requirements, according to a WSU News release.

It is essential that we continue to develop innovative technologies, such as our new microwave that is being introduced globally as a replacement to pasteurization, and research scientists that will continue to discover new ways to keep our food healthy, Grimes said. This grant will do both.

The grant allows WSU researchers to be some of the top in the field and continue to create better technologies for the future of food sciences. It will also allow WSU to maintain its leadership on a global scale in the field of advancing innovative approaches for sustainability, according to the press release.

The three doctoral students participating in this training will be taught through not only classroom techniques, but research environments as well. The overall grant is intended to teach future leaders how to increase and advance food safety, as well as health and wellbeing in an eco-friendly way.

Juming Tang, WSU professor and one of the three researchers participating in the training, stated in the press release that the program supports WSU's vision to become a world leader in developing advanced solutions for safe food production.

The entire grant, titled Educating Food Engineers to Develop High-Performance Integrated Processing and Packaging Technologies that Enhance Food Safety & Quality, is funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) National Institute of Food and Agriculture.

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Biology Systems Engineering nabs grant

Smartphone stroke assessment shows promise

A smartphone application that assists vascular neurologists (VNs) with the assessment of possible stroke patients shows excellent agreement with the interpretations of other radiologists and independent, blinded adjudicators, say researchers. "Smartphone teleradiology assessments may offer a VN a single mobile...

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2012 Northwestern Scientific Images Contest Winners

Scientific research often produces beautiful images. These pieces, judged by a panel of local artists, scientists and community leaders, are representative of real Northwestern research across a wide range of disciplines, including medicine, chemistry, engineering, nanotechnology and Earth science. Click...

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Cerner Opening – Physician Executive – Laboratory Medicine

Cerner Corporation - Kansas City, Missouri Area Job Description Cerner's Laboratory Medicine suite of solutions offer comprehensive, fully integrated technology to automate the operational and managerial sides of the laboratory. Solutions automate processes and drive efficiencies within the anatomic and...

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