Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Developing a Disaster Plan

Another item on our national health agenda that is very important is…HOW DO WE COPE WITH A DISASTER? Having a SPECIFIC, CONCRETE DISASTER PLAN IS VITAL. It should start with a mobilization of personnel. If you mobilize everybody according to their strengths and expertise in specific areas, beginning with professionals, it would make for less waste of time, energy, and human power.

I used to be Director of Volunteers at a hospital where I was in charge of utilizing the HOSPITAL VOLUNTEERS for DISASTER PLANNING. I lectured to them on the concepts they should be aware of.

The number one item in disaster planning is to have neighbors living side by side get to know one another. Someone savvy about identifying and utilizing the strengths of each individual should be in charge of this endeavor. For example, a nurse in cardiac care, a health ecologist who puts emphasis on the environment, and a fire chief all living on the same street in a dire situation could make the difference between life and catastrophe.

Who are the people around you? What can they do in an emergency to help out the community? Make a list for your street. Who lives on it, and what is their specialty? What could you do?

This project could be called HOME PRESERVATION TEAMS.

I had a first hand encounter with a potential disaster when all the electricity went out on the grid of Northeastern America in the summer of 2004. I had just gotten off a plane when it was brought to my attention what had happened. I thought to myself, what could I do to help the people in this airport? A few things came to mind.

First, there was no one in central command. There were a group of stewardesses and pilots sitting around, laughing and talking. They didn’t see it as their responsibility to help these people. There was no one looking after the children and the elders. These people should come first because they can’t fend as well for themselves.

Secondly, the food supply was not well advertised. I went and got food, and there were some restaurants that had a lot of food and some that had nothing. I got more than I needed just to play it safe, but they should have had a disaster plan in the airport. If someone needs food, where can they get it? They should put a sign up that says food here, and it should be food that is not perishable.

Thirdly, there was a communication issue. Some people had cell phones while some people did not. How do they contact their loved ones? When I found a telephone, I called my nephew in Detroit and told him that I was stuck in the airport. At least then I had someone who knew where I was.

Fourthly, where do people stay? After this disaster the hotel in the airport put a sign up saying they were booked. They should have used extra furniture for passengers to sit on in the airport. For example, the seats are constricted to one per person; they should have had the foresight to create a pullout so people could recline with legs in the air. Also, toilets could not be flushed because of the problem of having no electricity. One could also not use the faucets because they were all run electrically. This is real shortsightedness.

I observed this for a while, and then decided that I had to get out of here. I saw all these people lined up to get out and find a cab. The line seemed like three miles long, but I had to go to the back of the line. I thought to myself, I must get out of here. I started singing and made my way up to the head of the line. When I got to the head of the line I could see what was going on. There was no order there of how to dispense all of these people.

THEY SHOULD HAVE GOTTEN ALL THE CHILDREN, SENIORS, AND PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES TO THE FRONT OF THE LINE.

Then I saw a limo with three people in it pull up. I asked where they were going, and they said they were going to Detroit. Luckily, they let me ride with them and I ended up finding a way out of the airport.

All these things that went wrong should be addressed before a time of disaster. The most important thing is to know the skills of the people around you.

The government pays disaster experts to come to conclusions, but they never come to any practical conclusions about our welfare. Big institutions that impact on peoples’ lives, like an airport or a cruise ship, should develop their own disaster protocol.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Students Pulling Their Weight in the Community

President Obama remarked in one of his speeches that after 9/11 President Bush had a golden opportunity to utilize the skills and talents of all of the people in this nation, and he did not. Now President Obama has a heavy load, and THAT LOAD COULD BE LIGHTENED BY ENLISTING CITIZENS AT ALL LEVELS. For example, school curriculums should reflect our concern about the environment. The concrete program is open to change and modification as we see what works and what doesn’t work.

An example of utilizing HELPING HANDS is COLLEGE STUDENTS OVERSEEING HIGH SCHOOLERS, WHO WOULD OVERSEE JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOLERS, etc..., acting like a pyramid…and focusing on issues of social and environmental importance. I am discomforted that certain elite schools in this country have not addressed energy and environmental concerns, or have not made students aware of how important these topics are. We welcome the growing number of ENERGY FAIRS.


I am also amazed at how WALLS SPEAK. What do they say? Nothing is happening here today, or SOMETHING IS HAPPENING HERE TODAY.

An example of this occurred many years ago. I had appointments at a certain university medical center. Each time I was there I felt disgruntled and let down. Each time I encountered bare walls. I thought, what a wonderful opportunity patients were missing to learn specifics about nutrition and health, exercise kinesiology, and environment and health. I asked some of the higher-ups who had some clout why they didn’t include art therapy, nutrition, sports therapy, and music therapy in their clinical center. I never got a clear answer, but continued to ask. They were just too busy with things of lesser value.

Let’s get each discipline (nutrition, exercise kinesiology, environment, etc…) to put these different therapies into a college curriculum.

This potential project would be to create murals that could be part of a class assignment for college students. It wouldn’t cost anything. If they had had the murals on these walls twenty years ago, it would have drawn people into the clinical center instead of drawing them away.

This project could be called HEALTHY MURALS; it could be done as part of an educational vehicle that links the particular subject matter of a student to the need of a community. If someone would delineate a project called HEALTHY MURALS the blueprint would be free, in essence giving it to these clinical centers at no cost.

There could also be something for lower grades called HEALTHY MOVES. This could be, for example, calisthenics before class. Even five minutes before class for kindergarten and up involving stretching or other simple exercises could be put into effect. This would be a thread that would connect education, health care, artistry, and self esteem. These are two areas that young people could easily become involved in.

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Medical Centers as a Source of Nurturing

As I viewed a new medical center, it occurred to me that we live in a somewhat dehumanized, non-nurturing society. Therefore, many people turn to doctors and indeed to medical centers as a source of nurturing. The more we can make these centers springboards to utilizing the nurturing skills of individuals, the more we will see a refreshing change in the power structure of patient/client vs. physician/medical center.

Monday, April 20, 2009

Background to the True Tales

Background to the True Tales

In the 1970s and 1980s, I became aware of the strong connection between the environment and health. During those years I received a Master of Science degree in Family Health Ecology and taught a course at Michigan State University.

I have always been an avid walker and grew increasingly dismayed to see the little pesticide application signs on more and more lawns. In fact, a pesticide company boasted that they treated four or five yards on every street. Wanting to protect myself and my neighbors, I began to distribute scientifically relevant materials door-to-door.

I quickly realized:

1) NO ONE WAS MOVED BY DIRE STATISTICS. People seemed to feel if illness beset them, they would deal with it then, and not through a preventive approach.

2) Their homes were their citadels, and they were determined to keep them inviolate, and PROTECT THEM FROM EXTERNAL INFLUENCES.

It came to me that TALES, especially if TRUE, would MORE LIKELY MOVE PEOPLE THAN DATA.

It is abundantly clear to me that if we genuinely want to bring down health care costs we must first assess ALL THE FACTORS THAT ARE IMPACTING ON THE OUTCOME, including preventive and corrective. Three things can facilitate this:

1) FOCUS on a multi-factored approach.

2) Join a COALITION with like-minded groups.

3) DRAMATIZE by telling true tales.

Four True Tales - Which Show Our Environment's Impact on Our Health

1. It was a balmy April spring evening. The light was still bright. I was walking near a small neighborhood playground. I saw there, two fathers, each absorbed in the play of his toddler son. As I approached them, I glanced down and saw a small white sign on the grass at the edge of the playground.

PESTICIDE APPLICATION--CAUTION POISON
DO NOT WALK ON WHEN WET

It was freshly applied that day. The fathers were too engrossed in interacting with their sons to notice the warning. If they saw the sign would they have left? Or weren't they even aware of the possible connection between the chemicals applied and the health of their sons?

PESTICIDE POISON ON THE PLAYGROUND?

The pesticide company should have put up a large, brightly colored WARNING FLAG and the CITY COUNCIL SHOULD CONSIDER BANNING PESTICIDE USE FROM ALL CITY PLAYGROUNDS AND PARKS.


2. A few years ago I was walking on the sidewalk around the back of an elementary school in the neighborhood next to mine. I stopped to watch two young girls, fascinated by their carefree rolling in the grass. They were teasing and laughing. As I turned the corner to the front of the school, the good feeling turned sour:

PESTICIDE APPLICATION
KEEP OFF UNTIL DRY

What was the foul up in communication? Did the school INFORM the students about keeping off the grass? The girls either didn't know, didn't PAY ATTENTION when told, weren't IMPRESSED WITH THE IMPORTANCE of what they were told, were ABSENT that day, or couldn't READ.

When school administrators and parents allow toxins so close to young people everything has to be WEIGHED VERY CAREFULLY.

WHOSE GROWTH IS TO BE VALUED MORE...
THAT OF CHILDREN OR GRASS?


3. A vibrant senior who takes pride in his lawn lives one block from me. He regularly uses a chemical lawn service to insure no weeds. Directly across the street from his yard lives a gracious woman who has serious health concerns.
One day the lawn service applicator came, and seeing the man's mail box on the woman's side of the street, assume is was on his property, and SPRAYED HER YARD INSTEAD. The service man DID NOT LEAVE A SIGN that spraying had been done nor told her about his mistake.
When the young men from the grass cutting service came, they "sniffed out the spray odor" and REFUSED TO CUT HER GRASS FOR AT LEAST TWO DAYS. This woman could have unknowingly tracked pesticide spray into her home. People frequently walk their dogs on the shoulder of both lawns as there is no sidewalk. If the grass cutters hadn't been alert, they might have been exposed to the fresh spray.

ACTIONS HAVE CONSEQUENCES...OFTEN UNFORESEEN,
OFTEN AFFECTING OUR HEALTH FOR GOOD OR ILL.


4. Another homeowner in the neighborhood, who had been adversely affected by chemical sprays, asked the pesticide company to call her before each new application at homes adjacent to her home. She was concerned about the SPRAY DRIFT PROPELLED BY THE WIND. They did call before several visits, but after one traumatic episode they stopped the warning calls.
This is what happened: A truck pulled up to the house next door and a woman company trainer and a young man trainee got out with their equipment. The trainer urged him to spray faster. He ran back and forth spraying not directly into the ground but laterally, up into the air, and across the ground.
When he saw the homeowner staring in disbelief, he started shouting, "Go back, go inside." A carpenter working in the homeowner's garage was a witness. THIS SHOWS HOW CHEMICAL SPRAY CAN DRIFT UNINTENTIONALLY BEYOND A LOT LINE.

WHAT MAY SEEMINGLY BE GOOD FOR ONE HOUSEHOLD
MAY BE TO THE DETRIMENT OF ANOTHER.

Four Compelling Questions

1. If you scan the lists of companies or foundations granting research dollars, you will find that oncology labs disproportionately receive the appropriations.
Why is there not more substantive support for environmental laboratories studying the connections between environmental irritants and health?

2. The New York Times on January 9, 2005 had a prominent article in its magazine section on how breast tissue and breast milk absorb toxins.
Yet in subsequent issues of the paper, why was there no apparent write-up of how to clear or prevent toxins?

3. In the 1970s, and up to today, Samuel S. Epstein, M.D.*, professor emeritus of Environmental and Occupational Medicine at the University of Illinois School of Public Health, and Chairman of the Cancer Prevention Coalition, has been alerting us to the powerful connection between environmental poisons and cancer. Dr. Epstein has published over 260 peer reviewed articles, and authored or co-authored 11 books. These books include: The Politics of Cancer, Breast Cancer Prevention Program, Cancer-Gate: How to Win the Losing Cancer War, and Toxic Beauty. In 2007, Epstein did a presentation named "Beyond Pesticides," at the 25th National Pesticides Forum.
Why has it taken about 30 years and untold misery to begin to consider this connection?

4. The Breast Cancer Fund in San Francisco, California, merits attention because it is a leading proponent of active measures which can be taken by women to avoid breast cancer, such as avoiding chlorinated chemicals, paint solvents, and contaminants in makeup.
Why don't more "pink ribbon" organizations take up this crusade against likely carcinogens, and counsel companies who are marketing potentially unhealthy products?



* Dr. Epstein can be reached at:
Contacts: University of Illinois at Chicago
School of Public Health, MC 922
2121 West Taylor Street
Chicago, IL 60612
(312) 996-2297

Thursday, April 16, 2009

An Insight on Healthcare

The view that President Obama and his staff are taking on HEALTH CARE and HEALTH INSURANCE in this country needs a BROADER, MORE ECOLOGICAL APPROACH. They're giving the public the message that if you have healthcare insurance you'll be TAKEN CARE OF and SAFE. Their goals emphasize the STATISTICS of everyone being covered, but what good is it to have coverage if that coverage means hospitals and physicians that, due to PRESSURES OF TIME, PEER REVIEW, and LOBBYISTS (from the confines of their narrow discipline or what's in vogue or making money at the time), NARROW THEIR PERSPECTIVE?

I remember hearing Teresa Heinz Kerry during the 2004 election, eloquently speaking about the need to GET RID OF POSSIBLE POISONS, PESTICIDES, AND POLLUTANTS in the inner city where children are at a high risk, rather than primarily focusing on statistics and treatment of asthma. Isn't it better while focusing on the asthma problem to deliver a MORE ENCOMPASSING APPROACH rather than just providing inhalers and steroids to these children?

IT IS A MULTI-FACETED ISSUE.

In order for health care to be effective and COST EFFECTIVE, we have to be more prudent, and have more watchdogs looking out for the safety of people. Attention must be given to what is going on in the REALITY OF HEALTH CARE, rather than just thinking that GAINING INSURANCE IS A PANACEA.

If a neighborhood has a relatively HIGH INCIDENCE of BREAST CANCER, attention should be given to ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS which could be IMPACTING on this incidence. For example, PESTICIDE USE, CAR EXHAUST, WATER CONTAMINATION, and HISTORICAL USE OF THE LAND (was it a nursery, was it next to a landfill, or was it near an industry that spewed noxious waste?) are all potential irritants.

This sounds good but it's not simple, because we are DEPENDENT on the VERY INDUSTRIES which may be POLLUTING to make our ECONOMY VIBRANT. This means we have to address the issue gently with a big stick, and RETHINK, RETOOL, and RETRAIN these industries which have negative effects on human welfare.