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Wed, 04 Jul 2007 00:05:57 GMT

Who cares enough to care for the elderly?

Who cares enough to care for the elderly?
There is an article in today's Times 2, written by a pseudonymous Liz Penny, entitled "Who cares?".

This article makes me angry. Very angry.
"When Liz Penny's elderly father had a fall and her mother developed dementia, it was the beginning of a nightmare journey through hospitals, care homes and red tape that took her and her close-knit family to the brink of despair"
In a long article (here) Liz catalogues the unrelenting decline of her once fit elderly parents. Dementia, alcohol abuse, broken bones, frustration and depression.
"In December 2004 they seemed fit and well, living comfortably and independently in their home of 40 years in the Midlands. We are a close and loving family and spend a lot of time together; I had noticed nothing seriously amiss. Then Dad fell over and cracked his head on a windowsill. There was a lot of blood."
The NHS is far from perfect and there are inadequate resources to look after feeble, elderly patients existing in the hinterland between so called "genuine" illness and "mere" frailty due to old age. And there is a regiment of non-medically trained commissars with clip boards tasked with over-ruling doctors and declaring elderly patients' "problems" as not falling within the ambit of the NHS.

I return to this topic frequently and touched upon it recently when I described Mollie Jones .

But that is not what gets me angry about "Who cares?".

What gets me angry is the attitude of the author, Liz Penny. For, you see, it is people like Liz Penny who are bringing the NHS to it's knees. Liz would say she is well-meaning, and maybe she is. But she lacks insight. In reality, Liz is a Welfare State scrounger. She is presumptuous, hypocritical and uncaring. All GPs know Liz Penny. "Liz Penny" is a pseudonym, but is also a collective noun. All GPs get phone calls from Liz Pennys and they always say the same thing.
"Something must be done, doctor, but I am not going to do it."Let us look at the Liz Penny story in more detail:
"Dad had a chest infection and was very confused. He was also going through alcohol withdrawal - it turned out that his GP had known for a year that he was alcohol-dependent, but had been unable to convince him to get help."
Why did you not know, Liz? How often did you really visit?
"We moved Mum in with me, 15 miles from her own home in the opposite direction from the hospital, while we all got over the shock. Another was to follow. Her forgetfulness was dementia. She asked the same question six times in 30 minutes. I had to label my kitchen cupboards and write out for her every night where she was and what was happening the next day. My sister Pam and I juggled our jobs with caring for Mum and visiting Dad, a two-hour round trip."
How had you managed to miss that Mum was dementing, Liz? How often did you really visit?
"Complete strangers to the welfare state, Pam and I turned to the internet to try to establish what financial help might be available. The answer seemed to be none, if my parents had substantial savings, which they did - Dad had astutely, or so he thought, raised £50,000 recently via an equity release on their house and put it in the building society for their future care needs."£50,000 is a lot of money. More than most can lay their hands on. Why should Dad not contribute to his own living costs? Unlike his daughter, Dad is attempting to provide for his own care. Why shouldn't he? Why should this burden fall on the taxpayer.
"Winter turned to spring. We moved Mum back to her own home, got her a referral to a memory consultant and, after much phoning, form-filling and investigating, found an agency to supply carers to visit her three times a day."Why did you do that, Liz? Why did you not keep her with you?
"Mum's daily carers were variable and the agency was unreliable. Mum lost a lot of weight. My sister and I rang her every day; she was tearful and confused. We rang each other eight times a day: Have you seen Dad? Can you get to Mum - the agency can't find anyone to visit tonight. Have you phoned their solicitor? Can you get to their building society? Have you rung Mum's GP to organise a medicines box from the pharmacy (a friend of a friend told us about this)? Can you buy Dad more pyjamas? Who's collecting Mum on Saturday? Have you rung social services? Can you look for a gardener and cleaner for Mum? Have you paid her chiropodist's bill? Can we get together to fill out these funding forms tonight? Who's taking a day off work this week to get her to the memory clinic?"Heavens, it is hard work, isn't it Liz. Let's hand it over to the tax payer. Do you really suggest that the NHS should be looking for gardeners?
"We put our own lives and families on hold and irritated our work colleagues with the long list of phone calls we had to make day in, day out. It was relentless, depressing and utterly exhausting - and that was with two of us to share the load."Sharing the load? Liz means sharing her guilt of passing on the load to someone else.
"Fit from years of tennis, Mum recovered physically and returned home. But spring turned to summer and her memory worsened. We went back to the internet and found another agency to supply live-in carers - mainly wonderful South African women who cooked her fresh food and played Scrabble with her. She put weight back on (but not before her own mother's engagement ring slipped off her thin finger and was lost) and I felt confident enough to skip some weeknight visits, although I still phoned her every day."You see, Liz, a bit of tender-loving-care and Scrabble, even from a South African woman, worked wonders. Think how much better it might have been if you had had the time to play Scrabble.

Then mum has more medical problems and needs a prolonged hospital admission. Eventually, she stabilises and the time is reached at which it is no longer appropriate for her to be in an acute medical ward:
"Then the hospital started to ask what our plans for her were; they couldn't do any more for her and she was bed-blocking. We had to decide between a nursing home and herown home."
Liz still ignores the obvious solution. It does not occur to her. Instead, Liz is now openly wishing her parents dead.

Why is Dr Crippen angered by Liz Penny?

Because, like all Liz Penny's, she will do anything except that one thing that would really help. Why did you not give mum and dad a home, Liz? Bit inconvenient? Other commitments? House too small? Who knows. You could have sold Mum and Dad's house and put a granny flat on yours, or bought a bigger house and used the residual funds to pay for carers to come in as and when necessary. And you would have been supported by the district nurses, and the family doctor.

God, it would have been hard, wouldn't it Liz? It would have interfered with your social life, and your skiing holiday, and maybe you would have had to reduce your hours at work. But they are your mum and dad, Liz.

So OK, you couldn't hack it. But pleeese don't come all this crap about "We are a close and loving family and spend a lot of time together."You may think you are, but you are not. If you were, you would have picked up on the drinking and dementia yourself.
"We are therefore still topping up the care package to the tune of £130 a week...."Oh tush. Tush tush. You and your sister are having to pay £130 a week to ensure mum and dad have decent care. You are a middle class family. How much did mum and dad fork out over the years for clothes, shoes, music lessons, swimming lessons, allowances, extra clothes, birthday presents, a little financial help here and there, presents for the grandchildren, holidays and riding lessons?
"I am so angry that we have arrived here. I am angry with Dad for not telling us about Mum's dementia. I am angry with Mum for not telling us about Dad's drinking. I am angry with myself for being powerless to make it all better for them with a wave of a magic wand."Not a magic wand Liz. And no, you could not make it "all better". But you could have improved on a game of Scrabble with a South African nurse.

You could have made mum and dad welcome in your own home.
"I am angry with the NHS for the disgraceful treatment of both my parents in two large hospitals. I am angry with the Government for its callous underfunding of care for the elderly."
The care of the elderly is underfunded. But Liz, your Dad is rich. He was, in your own words a "globe-trotting businessman father" and has, as one would expect, considerable financial resources; a state pension, two small occupational pensions, and £50,000 in the bank. And his own house, not a council house. Most people just have a state pension.

What are you really worried about? That you are going to have to spend your inheritance?

I agree that the care of the elderly in NHS hospitals is appalling. But that is not the most important issue here.
"I am angry with social services for the apathy, the lack of help, the misleading or contradictory information that repeatedly dribbled our way."They are not apathetic. Social workers are overworked, underpaid and jaded. And yes, they do become a little cynical about the middle-class Liz Penny brigade saying "something must be done" but meaning "something must be done by someone else."
"I am angry with God for drawing out their end in this demeaning way. If He does it to me, I shall sue."
I like the last sentence, Liz. If you have an address, there are a few writs I would like to send to Her too.

But the preceding sentence is a tad naïve. Even with optimal medical care, being frail and elderly with multiple medical problems is a bugger.

We may all hope for a long, peaceful and untroubled old age but in reality it is rarely like that.

+++++++++++++

Some of you will think I am being harsh to Liz Penny. I am not. There is no God given right to a peaceful old age. Life is not like that.

The NHS was set up and funded to deal with illness, not old age. The problem in the UK is that the Welfare State mentality has turned us into a nation of welfare payment scroungers. Why do families in this country not take responsibility for their own elderly? Why should the taxpayer pick up the bill for the social care of elderly, wealthy businessmen?

Liz Penny's article should have been entitled "Who cares enough to look after the elderly?".

Not Liz, it seems.

Why do we not care for our own elderly relatives? It can be done. Some British families do it. Families of Indian and Pakistani origin. I have never, in all the time I have been practising medicine, heard an Indian or Pakistani say "We cannot look after mother because we have jobs and families of our own" Somehow, they manage.

My practice looks after three large old people's homes and an EMI unit.

There is not a single patient of Indian or Pakistani origin in any of the old peoples' homes. There is one hopelessly demented elderly Pakistani lady in the EMI unit. She probably gets more visits than the rest of the patients put together.

There must be moral in thisLabels: dementia, elderly, scroungers, welfare state

Posted by: Dr John Crippen      Read more     Source


Tue, 03 Jul 2007 18:08:04 GMT

It's 9:30pm - Are You Still Working?

It's 9:30pm - Are You Still Working?
I don't work 9-5. In fact, there are very few entrepreneurs that do.

Do you know when your most productive time of the day is? For some it is at 4:30 in the morning. For others it is late at night.

I read a blurb in Entrepreneur magazine a few months back about CEOs who work late into the night - getting caught up on email and the camaraderie they feel when their email is answered instantaneously by other night owls.

"Ah, another soul working late at night."

I'm a night owl.

For me, I am most productive at night. I was reminded of that article a moment ago when I sent an email to two colleagues asking for an opinion and one of them sent me an email almost at the same moment with an entirely different question.

Two souls working late into the night.

It's interesting to read the time blog posts are uploaded = you find a wide variety of times during the day when people are feeling like reaching out with a thought or an opinion.

So when are you most productive? How about your employees? Have you given any thought to flexible schedules to allow for worker's unique productive times during the day?

Just a thought. Perhaps my last of the evening.

Deborah Chaddock Brown
Writer, Yawning
AllWrite Ink

Posted by: Deborah Brown      Read more     Source


Tue, 03 Jul 2007 10:32:53 GMT

Nicole Richie's Nylon Magazine Pictures

Nicole Richie's Nylon Magazine Pictures
“I don’t walk around pretending that I’m perfect, so I don’t think anyone should hold me to that. The dangerous thing is that there are 16, 17, 18-year-olds that people consider to be role models. I’m so happy I wasn’t famous back then. You’d think I was the fucking devil.”

"I don’t have a clue why I’m famous. I didn’t make myself famous…You’re doing it. I think people just want to say, ‘Oh, she doesn’t have a job she doesn’t do anything.’ They get off on that. But I do have a job, like everyone else.”

“It’s really sad how obsessed America is with weight. It’s sick. I’ve never gone a day without putting food in my mouth. I’ve never sewn my mouth shut. I’ve never gone on a liquid diet. So I want to know why I’m the face for a problem.”

“When I pictured heroin, I pictured some crazy crackhead with no shoes under a bridge. You never think that is going to be you. And it never was me. I was never under a bridge, and I always had shoes.”

source, source

Posted by: Joy A      Read more     Source


Tue, 03 Jul 2007 06:27:39 GMT

Lisa Nowak Wasn't Wearing A Diaper

Lisa Nowak Wasn't Wearing A Diaper
I love me a crazy ass bitch story, however, Lisa Nowak isn't as crazy as previously reported!Despite reports, former astronaut Lisa Nowak was not wearing a diaper when she drove from Florida to Houston, allegedly to attack a romantic rival,

"The biggest lie is this preposterous tale," said defense attorney Donald Lykkebak, according to Florida Today.

Nowak pleaded not guilty to charges of attempted kidnapping, battery and attempted vehicle burglary in the attack on Air Force Capt. Colleen Shipman, who was dating Nowak's former lover, space shuttle pilot Bill Oefelein.

According to reports, Nowak wore special astronaut diapers so that she could drive without stopping from Houston to the Orlando International Airport, where she allegedly attacked Shipman on Feb. 5.

Lykkebak said his client had been subject to ridicule due to the reports and explained that the diapers found in her car were in fact toddler-size.

Nowak, a mother of three, and her family had been forced to evacuate their Houston home during the 2005 hurricane season, he said, and the diapers had been used by the children and parents on that trip.

"A lie repeated over and over and over again can overcome the truth," said Lykkebak, who added that the diapers are not in evidence and were not investigated by police.

Honestly, the diaper report got this ho some press and in her case, bad press is better than no press at all. Like a psycho ass bitch, Lisa drove across the country for some dick and she didn't even get her chance to get off. She was arrested, lost her job and she still didn't get any dick. Tragic.

I'm getting weary of sensationalism. The media ran with this diaper rumor. Actually, I'm not mad at anyone. This story gave everyone a good laugh. I hope Lisa turns into a lesbian in prison. Something tells me she's a passionate lover.

People

Posted by: Joy A      Read more     Source


Fri, 29 Jun 2007 07:03:32 GMT

Hail a cab with point and click

Hail a cab with point and click
Hailing a cab works great in certain neighborhoods, but if you're off the beaten path there's not a lot of chances that a cabbie is going to randomly swing by for a pickup. One man is betting that the Digg generation would be more inclined to use taxis if there was a convenient web interface. Jason Diaz's 1-800-cab-ride.com (800-222-7433) plans to be the one-stop online shop for scheduling taxi cabs. Essentially, 800cabride.com is a car service that doesn't own a single automobile - it uses a network of independent cab shops around the country to arrange rides from one central dispatch office.

It's a pretty simple setup. Just go to the website, choose pickup and drop off locations, and the service will have a ride dispatched. Cab rides are billed at a flat rate that includes all applicable fees and tip, and payment is made on the website via credit card or corporate account. Airline pickups are "will call" when debarking so there's no chance of a delayed flight causing a missed ride. If you don't call the 800 number to confirm arrival there's no charge to the credit card. It's nice that they've kept it flexible because traveling can sometimes turn into a nebulous form of performance art.

I love using car services when traveling because I don't need to hassle with credit vouchers or even have to tip the driver. 800cabride.com is boasting a 10-15% savings over traditional cab rates thanks to bulk negotiating lower prices for their customers. So far service is available in the 25 major US markets and many other outlying cities. I highly support Mr. Diaz's idea, and I wish him the best of luck in his new business endeavor.

Stock image above taken from the Flickr set of the creative Mr. Jonathan Skaines.

Posted by: johnny      Read more     Source


Fri, 29 Jun 2007 07:01:15 GMT

Lessons in email and document protection

Lessons in email and document protection
In the lead-up to AMD's anti-trust case against Intel, the two firms are at it hammer and tongs, according to this news report.

Lawyers tell me much of this case might well come down to emails relevant to the lawsuit that, well wouldn't you know, are missing.

This case has enormous lessons for companies' email storage policies, says ZDNet blogger Robin Harris.

The problem for Intel, says Harris, is that the judge can instruct the jury to assume the missing emails showed wrongdoing, which would cost Intel billions of dollars.

Harris also draws parallels with the case of the missing emails connected to the firing of Federal prosecutors last year. What happened there was that many people within the White House had been exchanging emails on a Republican National Committee account using private laptop computers provided by the party for nearly two dozen employees of the president. The White House has argued that the idea was to keep political business off of government computers. Trouble is the record of some public business may have gone missing. Funny that!

And in another case, Oracle is asking asked a US court to make German company SAP AG preserve evidence on its computers. All in the name of preserving evidence at the heart of a corporate theft lawsuit. More in this news report.

As Harris says, email protection is taking on grave political, legal and social implications. And it puts a whole new slant on the meaning of accountability. He raises some important questions: Do you know what, if any, litigation hold policy your company has? Are you ready to implement a litigation hold if company legal counsel requests it? Do you know the records management professionals in your company? Do you know what they do?

Many executives would struggle for answers.

As Ted Frank, the president of governance, risk and compliance management solutions provider Axentis told me in this interview, companies have trouble with this because they operate in a different way and they cannot see compliance as a value proposition.

"The problem is that most organisations are reactive. They wait until there's a crisis or a particular problem before they move and invest in fixing the problem. So you have got a reactive market, you've got fragmentation of compliance and risk management IT governance and when people who are managing IT governance try to get approval to do things proactively, what seems to happen is that they fail to make a good business case. Articulating the value proposition and the reason for making a proactive investment is key. So many companies seem to have trouble with that."

Posted by: leon      Read more     Source


Fri, 29 Jun 2007 06:59:07 GMT

Porsche Cayenne Makes Bigger Splash Than Signature 911

Porsche Cayenne Makes Bigger Splash Than Signature 911
[Image Source: Porsche, AG]

The unorthodox outnumber the orthodox, or so we can believe from Porsche's March sales figures. Stuttgart's now widely accepted and seen sport ute known as the Cayenne is the major driving force behind North American sales, the company says.

Last month, 3,461 new Cayennes peppered North American highways and byways; twice the number of 911s which also enjoyed 18% growth over March, 2006's numbers (1,421 and 1,199 units, respectively).

Will wonders never cease. I'm still challenged by the concept of a Porsche SUV.

[Source: Porsche, AG]

Posted by: Gunnar Heinrich      Read more     Source


Fri, 29 Jun 2007 06:56:31 GMT

Paula Abdul For The Soul

Paula Abdul For The Soul
Paula Abdul is set to team up with popular motivational book series "Chicken Soup For The Soul" - in a bid to help inspire young girls around the world.The American Idol judge will create both books and greeting cards with the self-help franchise.

She says, "I'm teaming up with the people behind the 'Chicken Soup For The Soul' books and greeting cards aimed at girls and young women. The message will be 'keep your dreams alive.'"
source

Posted by: Joy A      Read more     Source


Fri, 29 Jun 2007 06:54:15 GMT

How Do You Know Which Is the Right One?

How Do You Know Which Is the Right One?
There are so many social networking sites out there today. How do you know which one is right for you? There are the general social networking sites like MySpace, Orkut, Friendster and Xanga where you can make friends with whoever is on there and anyone could be on there.

Then there are the niche social networking sites where you can meet people and get advice from other people with the same issues you have in life. There are a lot of these too. I suppose if you are looking for a niche social networking site you would just decide which issues you want to discuss the most and join that site.

So how do you decide? If you are going for a general social networking site how do you know which one is for you? Frankly, MySpace has the most people so if you're looking for old friends you are more likely to find then there than anywhere else.

Maybe you're not out to find old friends though, then how do you decide?

Posted by: Linda Roeder      Read more     Source


June 28, 2007, 11:51 PM CT

Cigarette taxes do reduce smoking

Cigarette taxes do reduce smoking
Increasing cigarette taxes is an effective strategy for reducing tobacco use but there may be negative consequences particularly in disadvantaged minority communities. As per a research studyconducted by scientists at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, a dramatic rise in illegal street sales of untaxed cigarettes was reported among minority low-income persons immediately after the price increase that reinforced smoking and undermined cessation efforts.

This is the first study to examine how living in a disadvantaged minority neighborhood shapes the impact of smoking policies on individual tobacco use. Participants in 14 focus groups in Central Harlem, New York told scientists that a large cigarette tax increase in New York City led to a pervasive illegal cigarette market in a low-income minority community. In an area where smoking rates were already likely to be higher than in the general population, even those motivated to quit were lured by bootleggers selling low-price cigarettes.

Eventhough interest in quitting was high among the smokers interviewed, bootleggers created an environment in which discounted cigarettes were easier to access than cessation services, said Donna Shelley, MD, MPH, assistant professor of clinical Sociomedical Sciences at the Mailman School of Public Health and the studys principal investigator. Popular brands could be bought on the streets for as little as $5 per pack, and the phenomenon of the $5 man -- the usually used term for a highly visible network of bootleggers who appeared after the tax increase -- emerged as a new source of low-cost cigarettes.........

Posted by: Tom      Read more         Source

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