Rethinking teen medical consent: Navigating complex health needs
Is it time to reconsider the age of medical consent for teens? This is a question I have been asking myself as my children are approaching 18. For many years, I’ve dreaded the thought of my medically challenging child turning 18 and suddenly being thrust into the not-so-warm and fuzzy adult world. I have nightmares Read more… Rethinking teen medical consent: Navigating complex health needs originally appeared in KevinMD.com. (Source: Kevin, M.D. - Medical Weblog)
Source: Kevin, M.D. - Medical Weblog - April 11, 2024 Category: General Medicine Authors: Tags: Conditions Pediatrics Source Type: blogs

poem
 IthacaOnce I finally left the islandOf Calypso the highway became an endless Series of off-ramps and mergingsEach exit sign an indecipherable medleyOf directional words — North and south, east and westFuture and past, here or now —All mixed up in inexplicable combinations That made no geographical sense The GPS on my phone showedOnly a red dot moving alongA single black line relative to nothing elseWhich is the definition Of going nowhere fast Time lysed itself from spaceWhile space moved on to whatever comes after time  Three minutes allegedly elapsedAccording to the digit...
Source: Buckeye Surgeon - April 6, 2024 Category: Surgery Authors: Jeffrey Parks MD FACS Source Type: blogs

Wednesday Bible Study: A public health lesson
Psalm 90 is attributed to Moses. At least David might have existed, although he certainly did not write the psalms attributed to him. Moses is an entirely fictitious character. We know for a fact that the Egyptian captivity and the exodus never happened. But I ' ll give the writer this much credit -- the human lifespan of 70 years was probably pretty accurate at the time, in the sense that it was about the longest people could hope to live. You may recall that in Genesis 6:3 God says the human lifespan will be 120 years, and that many of the characters in Genesis lived for hundreds of years. However, life expectancy -...
Source: Stayin' Alive - April 3, 2024 Category: American Health Source Type: blogs

Wednesday Bible Study: False prophecy
Psalm 87 is rather opaque. What seems to be going on here is that Zion, i.e Jerusalem, is envisioned as essentially the capital of the world -- that is, the world as it was known to the ancient Judeans. Obviously that never happened. It ' s not clear when this was written or what the intent really is. " Rahab " apparently refers to a legendary monster supposedly slain by Yahweh, as mentioned later in Psalm 89, not the helpful brothel keeper of the Book of Joshua, and it is thought to be a metonym for Egypt, though I ' m not sure why scholars think so. Regarding Psalm 88, nobody knows whatMahalath Leannoth means. Mahal...
Source: Stayin' Alive - March 27, 2024 Category: American Health Source Type: blogs

History Lesson
Psalm 78 is, I believe, the third longest psalm. It ' s also one of three so-called " long history " psalms. It basically recounts events from Exodus and Numbers, in chronologically confused order, and then skips ahead to touch on the establishment of the reign of David. The listing of the plagues of Egypt does not exactly correspond to the canonical version of Exodus we have today -- there are no caterpillars or frost in Exodus. This may just be a fanciful addition, or it may be that it draws on a lost version of the story. Once again, keep in mind that there were no printing presses and any document would have existed in...
Source: Stayin' Alive - March 13, 2024 Category: American Health Source Type: blogs

Sunday Sermonette: The dark book
As I explained last time, the Book of Psalms is a compilation and Psalm 72 is evidently the conclusion of one of the component books. The next ten are attributed to Asaph, who was one of king David ' s chief musicians, but that doesn ' t really make sense because they seem to refer to a time when the kingdom was in dire straits, quite unlike the triumphalist tone of the depiction of David ' s reign. Psalm 73, which is used in both Jewish and Christian liturgy and has been set to music, asserts continued faith even while the wicked prosper. The psalm predicts the downfall of the wicked, although as we know that doesn ' t ne...
Source: Stayin' Alive - March 3, 2024 Category: American Health Source Type: blogs

Sunday Sermonette: David Kvetches
We have two short psalms and one long one today. " Mahalath " in Psalm 53 is probably a kind of stringed instrument,  perhaps similar to a guitar. The singer believes that all of humanity is depraved. This seems to have been written at some time of ill fortune, but the context is not specified. Psalm 54 refers to an incident in 1 Samuel 23. David was hiding from Saul in the wilderness of Ziph, when the Ziphites (presumably some Ziphites, or their representatives) went to Saul and told him where David was to be found. Saul and his army went to capture David, but they were called away to respond to a Philistine att...
Source: Stayin' Alive - January 28, 2024 Category: American Health Source Type: blogs

Wednesday Bible Study: Specificity
The next four psalms -- 14 through 17 -- are particular reminders that these were mostly written for specific occasions, in response either to the writer ' s perception of current events, or his personal situation.  Actually I don ' t know if any of these might have been composed by women. While it ' s likely that the priesthood had a monopoly on literacy during the time most of these were composed, priests could have served as scribes for others. I note that in Exodus, Miriam leads a female choir and implicitly was the composer of their song.  Some are more general assertions of what the writer values moral...
Source: Stayin' Alive - November 22, 2023 Category: American Health Source Type: blogs

Wednesday Bible Study: Job finally shuts up
 Yep. He spends the next three chapters saying, endlessly, the following:I used to be riding high, fortunate and admired, benevolent and generous.Now I ' m in the pits.If I ' d done anything wrong I could understand it.  And then, thank God, " The words of Job are ended. " It ' s long past time for this guy to STFU.29 And Job again took up his discourse, and said:2 “Oh, that I were as in the months of old,    as in the days when God watched over me;3 when his lamp shone upon my head,    and by his light I walked through darkness;4 as I was in my a...
Source: Stayin' Alive - October 18, 2023 Category: American Health Source Type: blogs

Sunday Sermonette: Desperate to get this over with
neJob now goes on a three chapter rant saying the same shit over and over again that he already said nineteen times. I ' m really sorry about this, I ' m as anxious to come to the end of it as you are. So I ' m going to post three chapters today, they ' re all Job yammering on so why not? It ' s just more of God and His creation are beyond understanding; and I ' m righteous, I don ' t deserve this, but nevertheless I ' m not going to say anything bad about God.  I ' ll just make a couple of notes.First, all of the stuff Job says we can ' t possibly understand -- notably in Chapter 28 -- we do understand, at least a lo...
Source: Stayin' Alive - October 15, 2023 Category: American Health Source Type: blogs

Wednesday Bible Study: A little literary history
In Ch. 24, Job laments the wickedness of many humans and the seeming indifference of God to the fate of the good versus the wicked. In the mercifully short Ch. 25, Bildad again tries to blame Job for his own fate. While we continue to wade through this interminable rich purple poetry, I ' ll at least try to entertain you with a bit of speculation about the origin of this story. Job was probably written in its present form in the 6th Century BCE, or perhaps a bit later. A Sumerian work dated around 1,700 BCE, usually called in English the Poem of the Righteous sufferer, tells a similar story, far more briefly, of a man...
Source: Stayin' Alive - October 11, 2023 Category: American Health Source Type: blogs

We Have All Been The Victim Of False Government Propaganda Regarding Our International Intelligence Capability!
This headline says it all! Hamas attack: This was a terrible intelligence failure by Israel Greg Sheridan 9:11PM October 7, 2023 The Hamas attack is an Israeli nightmare. Not so much the perhaps 5000 rockets – though the numbers are disputed - the terrorist group launched against Israel, but the terrorists roaming through southern Israeli towns, where women and children take shelter in “ (Source: Australian Health Information Technology)
Source: Australian Health Information Technology - October 8, 2023 Category: Information Technology Authors: Dr David G More MB PhD Source Type: blogs

Wednesday Bible Study: Going around in circles
The ridiculous repetition continues, and I ' m not sure what to do about it. This is incredibly boring. They just keep saying the same thing, over and over, at absurd length. I pledged we ' d read the whole damn thing however so in order to keep my word, we just need to plow ahead. Unfortunately, I must warn you, it goes on for quite a while longer in the same circles. This does give us a few popular cliches, e.g. nothing but skin and bones, the skin of my teeth. Whether that makes the whole thing worthwhile I can ' t say. Anyway I ' ll give you two chapters to try to get this over with as soon as possible.19 Then Job...
Source: Stayin' Alive - October 4, 2023 Category: American Health Source Type: blogs

Sunday Sermonette: More endless yammering
Again I ' m going to post two chapters today just to try to get this over with. I sincerely apologize, I ' d forgotten how turgid and repetitive this book is. Yet again, Job takes hundreds of words to say that the comforters aren ' t helping and he ' s despairing; and in the next chapter Bildad once again says Job must have done something to deserve this, in hundreds of words. I ' ll just say that it would be impossible to get this drek published today, even in a college literary magazine. I ' m sorry to have to tell you that it goes on and on after this while nothing happens and nothing new is said. Again, if this is the ...
Source: Stayin' Alive - October 1, 2023 Category: American Health Source Type: blogs

How to Stop Overthinking Everything: 22 Simple Tips
What is holding people back from the life that they truly want to live? I’d say that one very common and destructive thing is that they don't know how to stop overthinking. They overthink every little problem until it becomes bigger and scarier than it actually is. They overthink positive things until they don’t look so positive anymore (and as the anxiety starts to build). Or overanalyze and deconstruct things and so the happiness that comes from just enjoying something in the moment disappears. Now, thinking things through can be a great thing of course.   But getting lost in a sort of overthinking disorder ...
Source: Practical Happiness and Awesomeness Advice That Works | The Positivity Blog - June 14, 2023 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Henrik Edberg Tags: Happiness Personal Development Success Source Type: blogs