Did you know? Surgeon General of the United States

Did you know we have a current Surgeon General of the United States?   I have to admit that I did not.  Mainly because he just started talking on television and when I finally saw him behind President 45’s podium in the correspondents’ press room, he was not talking.   The Surgeon Generals of the past seemed to have no problem commenting on medical things without a podium.

Dr. Jerome Michael Adams is our 20th Surgeon General, Vice Admiral, MD, MPH-HHS.gov, since 2017.   He is an Associate Professor of Anesthesia.   He is considered our Nation’s Doctor.   His mission is to advance the health of the American people.  The motto is “better health through better partnerships”.   He is to ensure that we are given the best information available regarding medical circumstances.  Prior to becoming Surgeon General, he served as the Indiana State Health Commissioner, from 2014 to 2017.

Generally, the SGs salary is $379,590 a year or $182 per hour.   A Doctorate Degree is the highest education required to become a licensed physician, 4-year undergraduate degree, and 3 years of medical school and residency.

I would have thought that Dr. Adams would have been spearheading the efforts against the Coronavirus, not Vice President Mike Pence.  Dr. Adams should also be wearing a mask when he is at the podium no matter who else does not.   Sorry to hear that he was hospitalized recently.

Source: 

Wikipedia

Moira McCarthy, “Anesthesiologists Are Vital in the COVID-19 Fight:  The Toll It Takes”, Healthline.com, April 19, 2020.

@JeromeAdamsMD, medicine.iu.edu (Adjunct Clinical Associate Professor of Anesthesia)

Written by Rosa L. Griffin

Drug Recalls, Sleep, What Makes a Good President, What’s Eating America, and Fecal Transplants, Oh my!

Drug Recalls

Check FDA’s online list of recalled drugs at https://www.fda.gov/drugs/drugsafety/drugrecalls or FDA Consumer line at 888-INFO-FDA and sign up for alerts.   888-463-6332 for updates.fda.gov/subscription management.

Sleep

Elle Hunt, (Sleep) “Shuteye and Sleep Hygiene: The Truth About Why You Keep Waking up at 3 a.m.”, The Guardian, February 17, 2020.

Rosa’s Opinion–What Makes a Good President

A good president cares about the world and all its people.

A president is only as good as the people she or he can rely on and the structure she or he has under them.    Otherwise, it’s just a matter of time before he or she will crumble.

That’s where allies come in because a president of one country can’t do it all.

A president is known by the company he keeps—good or bad.   It’s been proven time and time again.

“What’s Eating America”

Andrew Zimmern, American chef, is a man of heartfelt convictions.   He came up with a 5-part series recently on MSNBC entitled “What’s Eating America” on Sunday nights at 9 p.m.   The series includes the topics of Immigration, Climate Change, Addiction, Voting Rights, and Healthcare.    I watched the episodes on Immigration (in which he was accompanied by José Andrés, a fellow award-winning chef and humanitarian) and Voting Rights, and I hope to watch the fifth one on Healthcare on March 15.

If they repeat the series (and I hope they do), I will watch the ones that I missed—Climate Change and Addiction.   I know I could have DVR’d them, but my skills at that need improvement.  

This is the same man who starred on the series, “Bizarre Foods with Andrew Zimmern”.   Because I had seen some of that series, I wasn’t going to watch “What’s Eating America” because I figured it would be more of the same.

I appreciate that the results of the episodes I’ve seen which were well-reported and stuffed with pertinent information and locales across America.   I am so proud of his efforts.

Zawn Villines, “What is a Fecal Transplant?  Everything You Need to Know”, medicalnewstoday.com, May 8, 2019.

Here’s something I had never heard of.    And, don’t soon want to hear of it again.

“A doctor transplants feces from a healthy donor into another person to restore the balance of bacteria in their gut.  It may help treat gastrointestinal infection, etc.   Antibiotics destroy good as well as bad bacteria.  Other names the procedure goes under:  bacteriotherapy, fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT), etc.”

There’s something I’d like to implant fecally, but “won’t touch that”!

Review of movie, Little Woods (2018)

The movie is about what poor people have to do to make it in an impoverished rural area.     It was filmed in North Dakota and Canada.   Farming is North Dakota’s state industry.  The movie is set in a rural area inspired by Williston, North Dakota.   It is a documentary on poverty and drug abuse.

Ollie’s (played by Tessa Thompson) downhill spiral started when she had to cross into Canada at North Dakota’s border to get discounted prescription medicine for her dying mother, which got her caught up in the drug trade.   After some jail time and eventual parole, she makes herself content with providing laundry services and selling home-made sandwiches and coffee to workers who constantly ask her for pain pills.   She turns them all down because she is trying to get enough money to keep the home that she and her mother lived in before she gets evicted.  No one was making house payments for months.  I wonder why her homeless sister Deb didn’t move back in with Ollie to help with expenses.  Perhaps there was a past troubling relationship with her mother or Ollie.

Her sister Deb (played by Lily James) already has a child by her husband Ian (played by James Badge Dale) who appears to be living in some kind of group home himself, and she gets pregnant a second time.    Deb was already living in an abandoned RV in a superstore parking lot, thinking that the notices repeatedly posted on the RV didn’t mean that she had to move any time soon.    So, Deb decides that she needs an abortion because her first child’s father already is not taking care of that child—the reason she was living in an abandoned RV in the first place I assume.  But she is told that an abortion would cost $8,000 without health insurance.  Deb doesn’t have health insurance. 

Tessa’s character Ollie gets back into the drug trade to help her sister and keep her mother’s house so she herself will have a place to live.   Drug dealing is something she promised herself she would never do again because she’s on parole after doing it for her mother.   But now she has to do it again to get her unlucky sister out of trouble.   Talk about being between a rock and a hard place.

To top it off, Bill, the local drug dealer (played by Luke Kirby) fronts her the money for the drugs so she can give him a cut of her business and, basically, she ends up working for him.   After arriving in Canada, her sister was nearly raped trying to get an illegal ID so she can get a free abortion in Canada.   And, she and her sister were nearly arrested by a Canadian policeman for loitering.  To top it off, Deb brought her child with them on the trip.   He was sleeping in a cold car.   Then, Ollie’s connection in Canada kept Deb’s child while Ollie took her sister to enroll in a program that would allow her to get the abortion. Opioids are the kind of drugs she purchases for average working people who need to work while in pain in jobs with no benefits or health insurance.   Ollie makes her former drug connection and gets the opioids that the American workers need. 

Tessa’s character Ollie can’t keep the money in her mother’s house because her parole officer makes regular searches of her home as part of her parole, so her sister volunteers to keep the money in the trailer.    I’m sure you can guess that the inevitable happened with the trailer.

The only bright spot (thank God there is one) is when Tessa’s character gets interviewed for a job through the efforts of her parole officer (played by Lance Reddick).   I found myself cussing out the characters trying to get them to avoid the obvious mire into which they were sinking, much like a horror movie.   I was glad when the horror of the movie ended.  I hoped that things would turn around for them.   At the end of the movie, it was still questionable whether they would survive.

Although the movie was intense—wrong step after wrong step—Tessa Thompson and Lily James gave award-winning performances.   Tessa Thompson I have seen in many things (Men in Black International, Furlough, Thor: Ragnarok, Avengers: Endgame, etc.), but she really displays the hopelessness of the situation she continues to get into just to help her family.   The half-sister played by Lily James is stuck in a bad lifestyle of her own making although we aren’t told why she’s not with her husband.   Lily James I know from the Downton Abbey television show, where I saw her for the first time.   Then I saw her in Cinderella and Mama Mia 2. 

The songs in the movie are so solemn because there is not much happiness in this movie.   Nia DaCosta is the writer and director.    Although watching this movie was like watching an inevitable accident that you can’t turn your eyes away from, I enjoyed the movie.   Official site:  https://www.littlewoodsmovie.com.

Other sources:

Melissa Healy, “How Factory Closings May Have Fed Opioid Crisis:  Study Finds More Overdoses in Areas Hit by Loss of Auto Jobs”, Baltimore Sun, SunPlus, Thursday, February 6, 2020.   The auto industry closing of factories have influenced drug use.  

Peter Debruge, “’Little Woods’ Review:  Nia DaCosta’s Tough, North Dakota-Set Debut”, https://variety.com/film/reviews, April 19, 2019.   I quote from this Variety review: “So much of the recent political debate has focused on the United States’ southern border, and the threat of illegal drugs and criminals filtering up through Mexico.  But what of the north, where Americans traffic opiates and prescription pills from Canada across a border that runs nearly three times as long?” 

Deborah Rudacille, “Photos:  What Bethlehem Steel Meant to Baltimore; In Baltimore, Visions of Life After Steel”, May 15, 2019, Citylab.com.    I would also say the loss of manufacturing jobs period influenced drug use, including the closing of Sparrows Point’s Bethlehem Steel in 2012 in Maryland.

Written by Rosa L. Griffin 

How to Identify Fake News

“Fake news refers to false news stories, hoaxes or propaganda created to deliberately misinform or deceive readers.  Usually, these stories are created to either influence people’s views, push a political agenda, or cause confusion.  It can also be a profitable business for online publishers.”

How to spot fake news

  1. Be skeptical of headlines.
  2. Look closely at the link.
  3. Investigate the source.
  4. Watch for unusual formatting.
  5. Inspect the dates.
  6. Check the evidence.
  7. Look at other reports.
  8. Do some fact checking.

“There are many good websites, like Politifact.com, Snopes.com, and FactCheck.org that can help you verify a story.”  When I worked in a library, some librarians relied on Snopes.com for verification of rumors.

No matter your age, you or someone you know can benefit from an article in the Beacon.   Read the details of the article below on their website, https://thebeaconnewspapers.com or pick up a free copy in various places like libraries, senior centers, etc.   Beacon has more than 2400 distribution sites in Maryland and Virginia (Washington DC, Howard County, Baltimore MD, and Richmond VA).   They have a circulation of 400,000 per month.

Source: Miller, Jim.  “Identify Fake News; Don’t Send It to Others”, Baltimore Beacon, September 2019, page 5.  The Beacon in focus for people over 50 , P.O. Box 2227, Silver Spring, MD  20915, (410) 248-9101, email: info@thebeaconnewspapers.com.

Test Your Fake News Sensor

Pew Research Center has a quiz for you–see if you can answer all five questions correctly. Take the quiz at pewresearch.org/quiz.

“When Americans call a statement factual, they overwhelmingly also think it is accurate; they tend to disagree with factual statements they incorrectly label as opinion.”

Source: Foster, Margaret. Technology & Innovations. Links & Apps. “Test Your Fake News Sensor”, Baltimore Beacon, November 2019, page 5.  The Beacon in focus for people over 50 , P.O. Box 2227, Silver Spring, MD  20915, (410) 248-9101, email: info@thebeaconnewspapers.com.

Submitted by Rosa L. Griffin

Did You Know? Fibroids

When you are younger and discovered to have fibroids, doctors usually tell you not to worry about them if they are not giving you severe pain.  Mild menstrual pain is acceptable to doctors.  

“Fibroids are also called uterine myoma.   They are noncancerous growths in the uterus that can develop during a woman’s childbearing years.  Fibroids can also cause prolonged menstrual cycles and low back pain.   200,000 cases occur every year.”

But, surprise!   I started getting pain so severe that I couldn’t stand up five days out of every month.   No amount of any over-the-counter medication did any good whatsoever.   I found that opioids don’t take pain away but make you not care about the pain; thus you can overdose.    So, being past what I considered child-bearing age, I ended up having a partial hysterectomy which gave me new life monthly without menopause symptoms to this day.

However, Evelyn Champagne King nearly died from fibroids.    “In 2006, I had an emergency health crisis.  I had a fibroid, which a lot of women and girls need to keep up on.   You can have a fibroid that takes things away from you and it took my life.  Literally, I had to be brought back and if it wasn’t for my husband being with me, I wouldn’t be here to speak on it.”

The good news is that fibroids are treatable by a medical professional and require a medical diagnosis.  Lab tests or imaging is often required.   Fibroids can be chronic and last for years or a lifetime.   

Some fibroids today can be treated via uterine fibroid embolization (UFE) which is a minimally invasive procedure which also has its risks.  It uses a form of real-time x-ray called fluoroscopy to guide the delivery of embolic agents which destroy fibroid tissue in the uterus.

Sources:  Uterine fibroids.  Mayo Clinic

Evelyn Champagne King Details the Terrifying Time That She Died Literally.  Posted April 7, 2015.  https://www.iloveoldschoolmusic.com

Uterine fibroids.  https://womenshealth.gov

www.radiologyinfo.org

Written by Rosa L. Griffin

Absolute Power Corrupts Absolutely (A Quote)

This was a best-known quote of the 19th century British politician, historian, and moralist Lord John Emerich Edward Dalberg Acton 1834-1902, in a letter to Bishop Mandell Creighton in 1887.  But, he was borrowing from other speakers or writers who earlier said it differently.

A king was the one with the most wealth and power.  This person thinks that all in their “kingdom” are pawns to do with as they please and they’ve done it so long that they believe their own hype.    They rule by threats, coercion, bargaining, murder, and compensating.   “…this option to impose on without any regard whatsoever for due process, becomes, in the hands of most, a license to harm, if not destroy the careers and lives of others.  Leadership incompetence” 1

“Absolute monarchies are those in which all power is given to, or as is more often the case, taken by, the monarch.   Examples were Roman emperors who thought they were gods and Napoleon Bonaparte who declared himself emperor”.2

There’s no room for absolute power in a democracy of checks and balances.  As seen recently, if you act only to build your own wealth, it will eventually come back to bite you in the behind.

As in the movie, The Man Who Would Be King (1975), based on Rudyard Kipling’s 1888 original story, two con men (Carnehan and Dravot, “British adventurers in British India”) sought their fortune in a foreign country, Afghanistan.   They were fellow freemasons to the journalist that they convinced to help them with their research.  They started out by helping people who were warring against each other and came up with satisfactory solutions.   But, then they went a few steps too far by becoming kings themselves over people whose customs they didn’t understand.

Since the holy men who lorded over all the local tribes declared Dravot (Sean Connery) a descendant of  a God because of the freemason symbol he wore around his neck, he basically was thought to be a God for a few months until he told the holy men that he was going to marry a local girl and father children.  The local girl was instructed to bite Dravot on the face causing him to bleed.  Seeing Dravot bleed, the holy men knew he was not a God, and executed him.

Two years later Carnehan (Michael Caine) returned to the journalist.   They had paid for their deceit.  Carnehan had been tortured, crippled, and released.   But, he showed the journalist (Christopher Plummer) the skeletal head of Dravot that was still wearing his golden crown.

Both actors did a wonderful job, especially Sean Connery’s character explaining that he felt this Godship was his calling, and he intended to mend his ways.   Had they left with the spoils before they were outed, as Carnehan wanted to do, they would have been wealthy men.   But, Dravot believed his own hype.

And, now we have another example of absolute power in the case of the Saudi Arabian American journalist executed in the Saudi consulate in Turkey recently.    He was the  same journalist who accompanied President 45’s business dealers to Saudi Arabia on past trips.  And, don’t forget the arms deal President 45 already made with the Saudis.

Sources:

  1. Dr. Robert Aziz, Huffington Post, https://m.huffpost.com
  2. Absolute Power Corrupts Absolutely (A Quote), https://www.phrases.org.uk
  3. Wikipedia, Rudyard Kipling, The Phantom ‘Rickshaw and other Eerie Tales

Submitted by Rosa L. Griffin

 

Fun Facts to Know and Tell About Baltimore 

Baltimore City is an independent city (meaning it’s not part of any county).   As such, it is the largest independent city in the U.S.

Snowballs/snowcones were invented in Baltimore during the Industrial Revolution.

The Great Baltimore Fire of 1904 burned for 30 hours, during which it destroyed 1,500 buildings and leveled entire neighborhoods.  One of the reasons cited for the widespread destruction was mismatched hose couplings that impeded fire-fighting efforts.  As a result of the Great Baltimore Fire, firefighting equipment was standardized across the United States.

The first dental school in the world was founded in Baltimore in 1840.

Baltimore has more statues and monuments per capita than any other city in the U.S.

The first telegraph line in the world was established between Washington, D.C., and Baltimore in 1844.

Source:   See the rest of the article, “Fun Facts to Know and Tell About Baltimore”, in the free Baltimore Beacon, August 2018, Arts & Style, pages 22 and 25.

Did you know?  A Friend in Sports Radio

Andre A. Melton has a sports show on WEAA 88.9 FM.   He was present when Odessa Rose spoke with gratitude about her thanks to the many Black Writers’ Guild of Maryland’s members who came to the premiere of her movie, Water in a Broken Glass, at the Senator on March 1, 2018.

Andre says that he tries to put at least one item of a general nature in with the sports on each show.  So, listen up—you don’t know what he may be talking about next.

Email:  anmel1@morgan.edu

Phone:  443-825-7857

Fax:  443-885-8206

1700 E. Cold Spring Lane

New Communications, Suite 300

Baltimore, MD  21251

 

Written by Rosa L. Griffin

Did you know? Escarpment

I found out that an escarpment is “a steep slope or long cliff that forms as an effect of faulting or erosion and separates two relatively level areas of differing elevations.”  There are escarpments in Niagara, Southern Africa, Caprock, Catskills, Bandiagara, Helderberg, and Knobstone, to name a few.

Guess where I heard the word escarpment?  In a Tarzan movie, “Tarzan’s N. Y. Adventure” (1942) in which Tarzan and Jane’s “adopted” son, Boy (Johnny Sheffield), is kidnapped by hunters who work for circus people and were given a deadline to leave by Tarzan.   So, Jane (Maureen O’Sullivan), Tarzan (Johnny Weismuller), and Cheetah (chimpanzee) get to go to America.

Tarzan is based on a character created by Edgar Rice Burroughs.  And, in spite of 12 movies, Tarzan still never learned to speak more than a 2-3 word sentence, i.e. “Jane go”, “Boy no go”, etc.   Yet, he knew the word “escarpment”.

Johnny Weismuller was “one of the world’s fastest swimmers in the 20s, winning five Olympic gold medals and one bronze for water polo.  He won 52 U.S. national championships and set more than 50 world records.   His character’s distinctive Tarzan yell is still often used in films.”  A heartbreaking fact is that he had a heart condition that was revealed when he broke a hip and a leg in 1974 causing declining health, but he got a 21-gun salute at his funeral in 1984.

That’s where the sexy comes in—right?  You want a relatively muscular man who’s scantily clad, can rescue you if you are drowning, can keep the “animals” in check, brings home the “bacon”, and protects his home.    And, if you can’t have a kid in the plot because the studio says you are already living in sin, you can always wait for a kid to survive a plane crash in one of the movies, so you can “adopt” him or her.

Sources:

Wikipedia

IMDb

Rotten Tomatoes

 

Written by Rosa L. Griffin

Did You Know?   Job Trend Sources

Most business journals or magazines have articles on job trends that are developing now or in the next 5-10 years.    Are you afraid to get out of your field?    Study everything on the subject first so you will know what to expect if and when you change fields.

Websites

www.WorldWideLearn.com

“Understanding some of the trends that shape the job market can help narrow your search.  If you are looking for job security and growth, you’ll want to focus on the industries that are adding the most new jobs in the next decade.”

www.Salary.com

https://www.bls.gov/ces/           The Bureau of Labor Statistics

Magazines/Journals

  • Entrepreneur
  • Forbes
  • Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
  • Fast Company
  • Inc.
  • USA Today
  • Fortune
  • The Atlantic

Books

Your local library has thousands of books on topics such as becoming:

  • Molecular biologists
  • Sports medicine doctors
  • Software developers
  • Chefs
  • Life guards
  • Midwives
  • Actors
  • Singers
  • Dancers

You name it—the library has a book for that!   What one library branch doesn’t have—another branch does and your library can order it!   I love libraries! My first job was as a page in the Enoch Pratt Free Library in my East Baltimore neighborhood.  The library is where I became fascinated with books and journals.   I ended up working in libraries for most of my life.

The Occupational Outlook Handbook is published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics and was one of my favorite books to look at when I worked in a college library.  It gave career information on duties, education, training, pay, and job outlook for a multitude of careers.

Here’s another interesting book:

Top 100 Careers Without A Four-Year Degree:  Your Complete Guidebook to Good Jobs in Many Fields, by Laurence Shatkin

Submitted by Rosa L. Griffin