My Strong Medicine

The adventures of a male nurse navigating through life, staying fit, surviving the journey.

Archive for January, 2011

You are never too old to set another goal or to dream a new dream. — C. S. Lewis

Posted by Sean on January 8, 2011

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You Know You're a Nurse… *sniff* *sniff*

Posted by Sean on January 8, 2011

You know you’re a nurse when you can identify certain medical conditions and/or diagnoses just by the smell in the room.

Today was GI bleed day.

Yep, that was my day.

Ahh…….

Posted in random | 3 Comments »

Results MAY Vary: Before and After Photo FAIL

Posted by Sean on January 8, 2011

Results MAY Vary: Before and After Photo FAIL

Posted in fitness, humor | 1 Comment »

Obesity: Till Death Do You Part

Posted by Sean on January 8, 2011

We don’t have an obesity epidemic right ??!! (insert sarcasm)

Amplify’d from www.hivehealthmedia.com

America has an obesity problem.

America’s funeral industry also has an obesity problem.

  • 15 years ago, the standard casket was 24″ wide.
  • Today, the standard casket is 27″ wide.

But we’re not here to talk about standard.

We’re talking about Super Sized caskets.

  • 15 years ago, the widest casket you could buy was 36″
  • Today, companies like Goliath Caskets build them up to 52″ wide, 8′ long and capable of holding someone who weighs between 800 and 1000 pounds.

And while those jumbo units aren’t the norm, Goliath sells between 6-12 of those 52 inchers every year along with another  3-4 various oversized caskets every week.

Hopefully, these 52″ models aren’t becoming the new normal.

Read more at www.hivehealthmedia.com

 

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Nike Unveils GPS Sportswatch for the Data-Happy Runner

Posted by Sean on January 8, 2011

Nike Unveils GPS Sportswatch for the Data-Happy Runner:

If I was a runner… I’d be splitting at the seams here.

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More young people are winding up in nursing homes

Posted by Sean on January 7, 2011

This is quite sad and disheartening.

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Habits are at first cobwebs, then cables. – Spanish Proverb

Posted by Sean on January 7, 2011

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Kudos to the American Society of Bariatric Physicians

Posted by Sean on January 7, 2011

Apparently the ASBP has some concerns related to the recent FDA recommendation lowering the BMI requirement for gastric bypass surgery.
THIS.
IS.
AWESOME.
I’m so glad that the surgeons are speaking up about and for the patients!
This is the best line here:
“concerned that the FDA advisory panel recommended lowering the BMI requirement for lap-band surgery, while the FDA recently denied two new obesity medications”
So the FDA is OK with upping the ‘risk’ ante, but not medication? I mean of course surgery is so much easier and safer than taking a pill? Not that taking a pill doesn’t have possible detrimental effects, don’t get me wrong.
I mean wow.
Once again – Kudos.

Amplify’d from www.medicalnewstoday.com

Bariatric Physicians Question FDA Recommendations To Lower BMI Requirements For Lap-Band Surgery

The American Society of Bariatric Physicians (ASBP) is concerned that the FDA advisory panel recommended lowering the BMI requirement for lap-band surgery, while the FDA recently denied two new obesity medications. Bariatric surgery is drastic and expensive and carries higher morbidity and mortality risks than lifestyle interventions or medication. Patients who could have otherwise lost weight in a non-surgical medical bariatric program may now be encouraged to skip medical therapy and jump directly to surgery.

The ASBP supports medically-supervised weight loss programs as the treatment of choice for patients with BMIs between 30 and 35, and believes that the recommendation of the lap-band for patients with BMIs of 30 and above is premature and carries risks that have not yet been considered.

Effective, non-surgical approaches involving structured diet and exercise, behavioral modification and medication when indicated should be considered first for many patients who will now be eligible for surgery. Before a patient ever considers surgery, the ASBP advocates that the patient first seek the help of a qualified bariatric physician, who will start with a complete patient work-up, ensuring that metabolic and overall health are not compromised. Proper implementation of a medically-managed weight loss program by a bariatric physician can lead to tremendous success, with long term reversal of obesity related co-morbidities equivalent to surgical interventions minus the risks.

Bariatric surgery will continue to be an option for severely obese patients, but patients who have had bariatric surgery require long-term lifestyle changes and nutritional monitoring to ensure a safe and lasting weight loss. Bariatric surgery is often accompanied by side effects and substantial failure rates. In fact, approximately 90 percent of patients in a recent Allergan study experienced a side effect, such as vomiting or pain. Almost 30 percent of bariatric surgery patients regain the weight they initially lost or have the surgery reversed, according to long-term studies. A recent study in the American Journal of Medicine showed that there was a five-fold increase of suicides among all patients who had bariatric surgery, most occurring within three years following the surgery. Weight loss surgery also causes nutritional deficiencies requiring lifelong supplementation of calcium, vitamin B12, folate, multivitamins, iron, and thiamine.

There are benefits to surgery but more comprehensive longer-term surveillance and follow-up methods should be developed to evaluate the negative side effects. Surgery is, therefore, not a treatment that is an end in itself, and it should not be viewed as the first or only choice for obese patients.

The ASBP concludes that bariatric surgery is not a quick fix or an easy answer to the obesity epidemic. Bariatric surgery has been and should remain a second line therapy after comprehensive medically-managed weight loss. Bariatric surgery does not end one’s challenges with weight; rather, it creates new and different nutritional, medical and psychiatric challenges that must be carefully considered. In conclusion, the ASBP does not support the lowering of BMI standards to qualify for bariatric surgery.

Source: American Society of Bariatric Physicians

Read more at www.medicalnewstoday.com

 

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Wisdom is knowing what to do next. Virtue is doing it. – DS Jordan

Posted by Sean on January 6, 2011

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Blog Regurge

Posted by Sean on January 6, 2011

It seems that my ‘testing’ of a new feature for my blog already backfired while I was out today??

My blog ‘vomited’ up the same blog post half a dozen times this afternoon for some strange reason?

 

The ‘test’ continues.

 

To my few-and-far-between readers please hang in there!

 

I’m off to start the first of many school assignments. Gewd times!

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