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The Baby Boomer generation is about to become the Golden Boomer generation. For the most part these Americans are active and healthy as they enter their golden years, but they may be hard pressed to find healthcare providers and health professionals that are able to meet the demands of the large numbers that are becoming eligible for Medicare and becoming a growing burden on an already over-taxed healthcare system.
To top it off, now they have to worry about ObamaCare and a questionable economy that has put them all at risk of being unable to enjoy their retirement to its fullest. Add to that the increase in life expectancy and the number of relatively older American citizens will continue to multiply. And while the numbers of the aged continue to rise, the number of geriatricians, those who take care of the elderly, is declining, which may possibly result in a healthcare crisis for our aging Baby Boomers that will be intolerable.
So, what is the answer to this looming problem? How in the world can Boomers expect to deal with these growing problems when the policy makers have waited far too long to address a failing healthcare system, only to ram it down America’s throats in a desperate effort to keep a campaign promise? Did anyone hear anything in regard to ObamaCare about how the needs of an aging America will be met? We obviously need to at least train the healthcare workforce in the needs of an aging populace, but how do you make that happen when so many doctors will suffer the negative repercussions of health care reform? How do you keep doctors from leaving and how do you attract new doctors, when those who have depended upon the Medicare system, and have therefore catered to the elderly, are faced with a decline in Medicare reimbursement? Instead of an increase in geriatricians, Boomers can expect to see a marked decrease in the number of specialists in this area, which is already mightily stressed and understaffed.
Unfortunately, with the advent of the new health care bill, the future is unpredictable when it comes to medical care for the Golden Boomers. They can only hope that with the coming elections their representatives in congress will hear their pleas and will understand that as this remarkably substantial number of Americans age and as their health fails that the economy of this United States may fail right along with the Boomers. The number of Boomers is not insignificant, nor have their numbers ever been so. They have shaped the world and the decline of the U.S. population of Boomers, if that is allowed to happen, will also be felt worldwide.
By: Joseph Stutzman
Tags: Aging America, Aging Baby Boomers, American Citizens, Baby Boomer, Baby Boomer Generation, Campaign Promise, Desperate Effort, Health Care Reform, Health Professionals, Healthcare Crisis, Healthcare Providers, Healthcare System, Healthcare Workforce, Large Numbers, Life Expectancy, Medicare, Medicare Reimbursement, Medicare System, Negative Repercussions, Populace
Posted in Home And Family · July 29th, 2010 · Comments (0)
Fezzywig, my gentle giant adopted warmblood gelding with the roached back, is definitely feeling much better. He has had a ton of bodywork and been given my special nutritional Horse Goo until it’s coming out the other end (yes, during the cleansing process he is a bit “methane-powered”).
He’s also running around like a wild man with my other gelding, Walker, and doing flying lead changes with ease in the pasture. Oh yes, and he also managed to take down the gates twice and cruise our little town once. But being the gentleman that he his, he came right home on his own!
Horse Health Care: 3 Things to Do for the Roach Backed Horse
So Fezzywig is definitely feeling better, but he’s nowhere near totally healed, and I have learned a lot about the horse health care needs of these kinds of horses. I have been in constant communication with my veterinarian, good friend, and font of holistic horse care wisdom, Dr. Madalyn Ward. Between my consults with her and my daily interaction with Fezzywig, I’ve learned the following:
1. Roach Back Horses Don’t Use Their Backs Properly
This is no big surprise because their backs aren’t formed properly. A horse with a roach back has some developmental difficulties. For instance, Fezzywig hates to have his stifles adjusted with Bowen-type moves, or any kind of serious physical maneuvers. He loves energy work on his stifles, which doesn’t involve moving any parts of his stifle around. He has also started getting “stuck” in his stifles occasionally, where it takes him a minute to figure out how to move his back leg from straight to bent. Dr. Ward tells me this is because the bodywork is changing the way his spine and haunches are formed, so he has to “relearn” how to use various parts of his body.
Because Fezzywig has not been using his back muscles and hindquarter properly because of his roach back, he has probably been propelling himself around using his hind legs from the stifles down. In other words he was not using his back muscles or his rump. This explains why he is having so much trouble with his stifles. They are probably perpetually sore. In addition, when he move his back legs, his joints make a sound like similar to that of sticky tape being “unstuck” from something. It is most likely that all that improper use of his hind legs has affected those joints.
To help alleviate the pain in his stifles and hind leg joints, I’ve been doing the following:
feeding him extra wheat sprouts, which are great for joint issues beefing up his mangosteen juice and blue-green algae to speed healing rubbing DMSO and castor oil on his leg joints doing a little energy work on every hind leg joint at each feeding
He seems to like all of this extra care and his stifles are already less sore. In case you are wondering, castor oil is an old Edgar Cayce remedy that works well on joints. I have to mix it with DMSO because castor oil is very thick and does not penetrate through hair and skin very well. The DMSO helps it penetrate.
2. Roach Back Horses Might Have Bony Backs So They Need Backing
When I knew I was going to bring Fezzywig home, I immediately went online and did a bunch of research on roach back horses. Most of the horses I saw had the typical roach, a humped back, but that was it. I didn’t see a single picture of a horse with a bony back, a back where the lumbar vertebrae literally stick up, like pointy spires. Yikes, what does that mean?
I posted frantic requests for help to the Horse Health Forum. I wanted to know what all those spiny ridges meant. The answer? It means that Fezzywig does not have any muscle development over those vertebrae because (surprise, surprise) he hasn’t been using his back or hindquarter properly. Whew!
To take care of this and help Fezzywig develop proper muscle over his hindquarters and spine, I have started backing him. Backing him will help him learn to use his hindquarter properly, and will also help him develop muscle in the right places. I will eventually back him in circles to develop some lateral muscles as well. We’ve already started the backing exercises. He has no trouble with them although he has no clue why we keep doing it! Luckily, he’s a pretty willing fellow, and will do almost anything for food.
3. Horses Who Have Suffered Trauma Need Special Help to Heal
My last question to Dr. Ward was this: Fezzywig has been in his roach backed pose for so long… what I more can I do to help him shift out of this paradigm and into a healthy stance?
Her answer? herbs. There is this new herbal product that apparently helps horses who have suffered trauma (physical, mental, or emotional) to “break the mold” and shift into a new healthier paradigm. In scientific terms, it helps them shift out of the sympathetic nervous system. A horse like Fezzywig has basically been in a traumatized roach back state for so long he has been operating from his “fight or flight” sympathetic nervous system, which does not promote healing. The Eleviv will help him shift back into his parasympathetic nervous system, which is associated with healing, rest, relaxation, and rejuvenation.
So Fezzywig is now getting, in addition to the beefed up Horse Goo, two capsules of these herbs a day. Fezzywig loves it. He tries to eat the syringe. I take that as a good sign.
So that is what I have learned so far about the best horse health care methods for roach back horses. Fezzywig’s posture continues to improve, and he is running and playing more than ever (as evidenced by the cruise around the neighborhood).
By: Stephanie H. Yeh
Tags: 3 Things, Back Muscles, Bodywork, Consults, Developmental Difficulties, Dr Ward, Energy Work, Gelding, Gentle Giant, Goo, Haunches, Hind Legs, Hindquarter, Horse Care, Horse Health Care, Kinds Of Horses, Madalyn, Physical Maneuvers, Roach Back, Wild Man
Posted in Pets · July 28th, 2010 · Comments (0)
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Posted in 618 · July 26th, 2010 · Comments (0)
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Posted in 716 · July 26th, 2010 · Comments (0)
No longer can health care organizations continue to provide services without changing the method of care delivery. There are so many processes involved in the delivery of care that many organizations do not know where to begin. Often when they do begin to implement a lean philosophy the focus is on the short-term project goals and not the long-term culture change.
Culture change education and management along with implementing lean processes leads to project success and long-term permanent savings. That’s a mouthful to say and a great deal to manage. Most lean projects lead to successful completion, but work culture tends to slip back to old habits after the focus is moved elsewhere in the organization. The savings slowly erode back to pre-project levels or in some cases new issues develop that create additional costs.
Therefore, it is important to facilitate a change management plan to accompany any lean process improvement project. While lean projects have a definitive start and end implementation date change management is on going. Change management education doesn’t have to be painful to be effective it needs consistency. Consistency may mean weekly, monthly, or quarterly facilitation sessions depending upon the complexity of the change and how many levels of the organization that are impacted. In other cases, it may mean daily reminders prior to beginning the workday to focus on the benefits of effective change.
Please remember when you are asked to participate in a lean health care project (or any lean project) to be aware of the impact on the organizations culture. If the project requires culture to change, be sure to recommend a change management plan. The executive sponsor will be thankful you asked as will the patients that your organization serves. Good luck!
By: Doug Kiser
Tags: Care Delivery, Change Culture, Change Education, Change Management, Complexity, Consistency, Culture Change, Executive Sponsor, Health Care Organizations, Health Care Project, Kiser, Management Education, Management Plan, Mouthful, Old Habits, Process Improvement Project, Project Goals, Reminders, Term Culture, Work Culture, Workday
Posted in Business · July 26th, 2010 · Comments (0)
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Tags: Good Health, Health Care
Posted in 610 · July 25th, 2010 · Comments (0)
No one will disagree that the cost of health care is exorbitant. Health care expenditures currently account for over 16% of our Gross Domestic Product – among the highest in the world. Both sides of the political spectrum have been scrambling to propose broader, more universal coverage for Americans; the specter of even more crippling costs terrifies us we hunker down and try to survive the recession.
Yet there are solutions – “fixes” — for the existing structure that have not been explored. The Gilchrist Institute for the Achievement Sciences, where I am Director has developed a six point program for reform. I believe it is time to challenge Congress to “get real” and improve our existing health care programs. It’s the application that needs reform and the administration that needs to be changed. These 6 proposals alone could reduce the existing health care system costs by over 50%:
1. Pursue Health Fraud: Health Fraud is estimated at $100 billion a year. Having citizens participate in a small share of the payment obligation, combined with an intensified crackdown by the state and federal governments will go a long way in reducing this significant amount.
2. Medical Tort Reform: The Fair & Reliable Medical Justice Act proposed by the Republicans could save the health care system an estimated $150 billion a year.
3. Life/Health Insurance Plan: Taking a whole life policy at younger ages and dedicating it to terminal (end of life) circumstances would go a long way to decrease health care costs nationally. A whole life insurance policy at age 25 for $200,000 would cost approximately $250 per month for some 11 years, then no further payment would be necessary. The policy will grow to over $1 million by age 90. It would then be assigned, pledged or sold to doctors, hospitals and pharmacies when terminal life is commenced. This could save approximately 30% of overall health care costs in this county – approximately $300 billion.
4. Interstate Policy Enabling Legislation: This is probably the single greatest consideration the insurance companies fear. It is ridiculous and totally restrictive economics to prevent companies from selling health care policies interstate. This consideration will expand significantly the competitive potential generating better options and price benefits to the public. This one factor could decrease premiums by as much as 10-15%.
5. Illegal Resident Health Tax: With over 12 million illegal immigrants draining our system each year, it would be prudent and just to charge them a tax for these services. At $2,000 per year, a sum of $24 billion would be generated. This alone could reduce the health care debt by 5%.
6. Medical Services Tax Credits: For doctors, clinics, etc. who serve low-income clients, a tax credit can be granted to participating practitioners.
By: Robert Flower
Tags: Citizens, Crackdown, Federal Governments, Gilchrist, Health Care Costs, Health Care Expenditures, Health Care Programs, Health Care System, Health Fraud, Health Insurance, Health Insurance Plan, Health System, Justice Act, Life Circumstances, Life Health, Life Insurance Policy, Medical Justice, Payment Obligation, Political Spectrum, Specter, Terminal Life, Tort Reform, Universal Coverage, Whole Life Insurance
Posted in News And Society · July 25th, 2010 · Comments (0)