A competent adult?

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Maude’s Awards Recognize and Reward Innovative Dementia Care – a program of the Richard and Maude Ferry Foundation

Posted in AgeWise King County.

The application period for 2023 Maude’s Awards is now open. Now in its fourth year, Maude’s Awards was developed to gather and share innovations that will enrich the quality of life for persons living with Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias and their care partners.

Annually, Maude’s Awards makes up to eight awards—three $25,000 awards to organizations and up to five $5,000 awards to individuals—for innovations that have demonstrated success in one of four categories of care: Making Connections, Cultivating Health, Supporting Care Partners and Treating By Design. For category descriptions, visit maudesawards.org/the-awards/.

Individual applicants do not have to be a dementia care professional to qualify—the interest is to discover ways that family caregivers and persons with dementia are making life better for themselves and others in their situation. Also of note: Maude’s Awards are for existing programs, products, or practices. They are not grants for the future.

Maude’s Awards is a program of the Richard and Maude Ferry Foundation created in 2019 by Richard Ferry to honor his beloved wife of 64 years. In 2013, Maude was diagnosed with dementia. Richard continues the loving journey as a tireless advocate to discover and share innovations that speak to the challenges and needs of persons living with dementia, and their care partners.

Hailey Richman, founder of the Kid Caregivers Puzzle Time program, at age 14, working on a large-piece jigsaw puzzle with her grandmother.

One of the 2022 Maude’s Awards winners is (now) 15-year-old Hailey Richman of Plainview, NY. Hailey is the executive director of Kid Caregivers. Kid Caregivers is a nonprofit organization that supports and empowers children who are acting as a caregiver, by teaching and incorporating coping skills and activities to enliven and improve the quality of life of adults living with Alzheimer’s disease.

One of the main activities Hailey created is the intergenerational Kid Caregivers Puzzle Time program, which has now reached all 50 states and 16 countries, in addition to the United States. Through Puzzle Time, people living with Alzheimer’s receive companionship and stimulation as they solve jigsaw puzzles with youth who are eager to assist them.

For information about all the 2022 Maude’s Awards recipients, visit the organization’s 2022 Awardees webpage. See also “Maude’s Awards Reward Innovative Dementia Care Strategies” (AgeWise King County, November 2022).

For more information about Maude’s Awards and to access the 2023 award application, visit MaudesAwards.org. Applications will be accepted through May 15, 2023 (6 p.m. Pacific Time).

Maude’s Awards also invites you to follow them on social media: Facebook | Instagram | LinkedIn | Twitter

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A president has faced arrest before Trump — for carriage speeding, 150 years ago

Thanks to Bob P.

Former President Donald Trump was indicted Thursday on charges related to hush money payments to cover up affairs. While the nature of Trump’s indictment is unprecedented, he’s actually the second to face arrest.

The first was President Ulysses S. Grant, just after the Civil War.

William West, a former enslaved person, joined the Metropolitan Police in the nation’s capital after fighting in the Civil War, according to the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund. In 1872, West was on the lookout for speeding horse-drawn carriages near Washington’s 13th and M streets when he jumped in front of a carriage racing towards him.

West quickly realized he had pulled over President Grant, and issued a warning. But the very next day, West caught the president speeding again and brought him in.

“I am very sorry, Mr. President, to have to do it, for you are the chief of the nation and I am nothing but a policeman, but duty is duty, sir, and I will have to place you under arrest,” West said in 1872.

That made West the first, and only, law enforcement officer to arrest a sitting president.

Grant was released on a $20 bond, which equates to just under $500 in 2023. He didn’t contest the fine or arrest and expressed respect for West’s decision to arrest him. The Memorial Fund reported that former MPD Chief Cathy Lanier said Grant had been issued three citations for speeding in his carriage during his time as president.

Of course, these two cases are different in a lot of ways. For starters, Trump’s charges are far more serious than a routine traffic violation. And Trump isn’t exactly following in Grant’s footsteps when it comes to respecting the legal process — where Grant respected West’s decision to arrest him, Trump has called investigations into his conduct “witch hunts.”

It’s not clear what this indictment will do to Trump’s chances of winning a 2024 election bid — but maybe Trump can take solace in the fact that the same year Grant was arrested for speeding, he was also elected to his second term as president.

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How to grow old

Thanks to Sybil-Ann

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For our Vietnam Veterans

Thanks to Bob P.

USAA® USAA SECURITY ZONE Robert Peterson USAA # ending in: 5616 Courtesy National archives, photo no. 127-N-A900056 Fellow Member, Fifty years have passed since the final American military forces left Vietnam and our remaining prisoners of war were returned. Even after the passage of five decades, we still owe these veterans a large debt of gratitude. During the conflict, political controversy and disagreement were sadly misdirected toward those who had admirably served our nation. When these brave warriors returned from Vietnam, they received neither a hero’s welcome nor appreciation for their service that they deserved, but instead got apathy, anger and hate.

Disappointingly, many were left to struggle alone with self-doubt, shame and the memories of those left behind. After their wartime service ended, these unsung heroes went to work, served in government and became involved in their communities. Vietnam War-era veterans went on to lead Fortune 500 companies, direct Oscar-winning films, create a prominent computer-programming language, map the human genome and many other outstanding accomplishments. Today, there are approximately 6 million living veterans from the Vietnam era – more than 30% of America’s veteran population.

March 2​9 – National Vietnam War Veterans Day – is dedicated to these heroes. You can honor them by watching the National Veterans Memorial and Museum’s Welcome Home Ceremony at 1​0 a.m. EDT. The keynote speaker will be Capt. J. Charles “Charlie” Plumb (USN, Ret.), a naval aviator who was shot down and held prisoner in Vietnam for six years. He’s legendary for his story “Who Packs Your Parachute?” The 50th National Vietnam War Veterans Day is a national opportunity to share our appreciation for the sacrifices made by a generation of veterans. Thank you, Vietnam veterans, for your courage in war and service to our nation, both in and out of uniform. Wayne Peacock USAA President & CEO
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If I die in a school shooting

Thanks to Mary Jane F.

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Roam roam on the range

The New Yorker on Instagram: “Someone had to tell him. #NewYorkerCartoons  🖋️ @hartley._.lin” | New yorker cartoons, The new yorker, A cartoon
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Legislation to improve access to the Death with Dignity act

Thanks to Barb W.

From End of Life Washington: WE DID IT! The State House of Representatives passed ESSB 5179, our bill to improve access to the Death with Dignity Act, with a vote of 53-43. With this vote, critical improvements to the law are on their way to Governor Jay Inslee’s desk for his signature.    These significant changes to the law remove unnecessary barriers to access for terminally ill Washingtonians.

With the passing of this bill, we have more than doubled the number of medical practitioners who can engage in medical aid-in-dying. We have helped the 20% of our clients who would have died before the end of the longer waiting period. We have saved hours of driving and delay for people living in areas not close to a compounding pharmacy.  

Our legislative champions, Representative Skyler Rude, Senator Jamie Pedersen and Senator Curtis King, really helped us get this bill over the finish line. You can click the button below to send them a thank you for their hard work on behalf of terminally ill residents of our state.
Thank the Champions
THANK YOU for everything you did this legislative session to ensure every Washingtonian is empowered to choose end-of-life care that reflects their values, priorities and beliefs.
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Dementia Friendly Seattle – Fri 4/28, 2023, 7:30pm

4/28 at 7:30 PM | $5-20 sliding scale | In-Person and Livestream
Town Hall Seattle and Center for Creative Aging Present
Dementia Friendly Seattle

  Did you know the Puget Sound region is known as a place where people with Dementia are respected, welcomed, and fully belong? Sandy Sabersky, Co-Founder of Elderwise® and co-author of The Elderwise Way, A Different Approach to Life with Dementia, will share how Spirit-Centered Care® provides connection and meaning for people with dementia as well as a way for care partners to grow.

Marigrace Becker, Program Manager of Community Education and Impact at the UW Memory and Brain Wellness Center (MBWC) and the Director of the Memory Hub will highlight the Memory Hub as well as some of the many resources available for people in our region living with and engaged with dementia.
This event is sponsored by Dementia Friends Washington.
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Volunteer in the Park!

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Guns Don’t Kill People, Americans Kill People

On the 20th Anniversary of “Bowling for Columbine” winning the Oscar, you can watch it for free-by Michael Moore. Thanks to Pam P.

Twenty years ago tonight, on March 23, 2003, our film, “Bowling for Columbine”, received the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature of the year. 

But it was also the fifth night of one of the greatest war crimes of the new century — the illegal invasion and bombing of Iraq by George W. Bush and the people of the United States of America. A whopping 72% of the American public backed Bush and the war, as did the majority of Democrats in the U.S. Senate. Bush’s cronies — Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, Elliott Abrams, etc. — desperate to take control of Iraq’s oil and eliminate Saddam Hussein, concocted a lie claiming Iraq was involved in the 9/11 terrorist attack and that it now possessed weapons of mass destruction. 

Of course, Iraq had nothing to do with 9/11 (Osama bin Laden plus 15 of the 19 hijackers were from Saudi Arabia). And, of course, the U.S. invasion force never found a single weapon of mass destruction. They did manage to annihilate hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians, a mass murder of human beings who never threatened any Americans. Nearly 5,000 American troops, sent to kill the Iraqis, were themselves sent to their own senseless slaughter. Their parents and families, to this day, have never been given a reason for what they died for, and no apology has yet to be issued to them for Bush selfishly sacrificing their lives for absolutely nothing but his own personal revenge. 

The utter sadness over this premeditated war crime is felt to this day. Bush and Cheney have never been indicted by the International Criminal Court and they remain free to do as they please. Few Democrats have apologized for being their enablers. I find it difficult to celebrate today’s anniversary of us “winning an Oscar” when the only thing we should consider remembering of what happened 20 years ago this week is this crime against humanity, committed in our name against the Iraqi people. 

Posted in Crime, Guns, War | 1 Comment

Hope you didn’t miss the show last night!!

NW Firelight Chorale: “Ain’t Misbehavin” (Naughty & Nice songs from the 20’s and 30’s)

Here’s just a brief taste of the fun! Can’t wait for their next visit.

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Biden Plan to Cut Billions in Medicare Fraud Ignites Lobbying Frenzy

Ed note: The privatized Medicare Advantage programs are making a lot of money. It turns out that a number of the Insurers are “upcoding” the severity of illness in their enrollees in order to be able to charge more. The government now is challenging the questionable charges.

By Reed Abelson and Margot Sanger-Katz in the NYT

“How’s the knee?” one bowler asked another across the lanes. Their conversation in a Super Bowl ad focused on a Biden administration proposal that one bowler warned another would “cut Medicare Advantage.”

“Somebody in Washington is smarter than that,” the friend responded, before a narrator urged viewers to call the White House to voice their displeasure.

The multimillion dollar ad buy is part of an aggressive campaign by the health insurance industry and its allies to stop the Biden proposal. It would significantly lower payments — by billions of dollars a year — to Medicare Advantage, the private plans that now cover about half of the government’s health program for older Americans.

The change in payment formulas is an effort, Biden administration officials say, to tackle widespread abuses and fraud in the increasingly popular private program. In the last decade, reams of evidence uncovered in lawsuits and audits revealed systematic overbilling of the government. A final decision on the payments is expected shortly, and is one of a series of tough new rules aimed at reining in the industry. The changes fit into a broader effort by the White House to shore up the Medicare trust fund.

Without reforms, taxpayers will spend about $25 billion next year in “excess” payments to the private plans, according to the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission, a nonpartisan research group that advises Congress.

The proposed changes have unleashed an extensive and noisy opposition front, with lobbyists and insurance executives flooding Capitol Hill to engage in their fiercest fight in years. The largest insurers, including UnitedHealth Group and Humana, are among the most vocal, according to congressional staff, with UnitedHealth’s chief executive pressing his company’s case in person. Doctors’ groups, including the American Medical Association, have also voiced their opposition.

“They are pouring buckets of money into this,” said Mark Miller, the former executive director of MedPAC, who is now the executive vice president of health care at Arnold Ventures, a research and advocacy group. Supporters of the restrictions have begun spending money to counter the objections.

The insurers say the new rule would harm the medical care of millions, particularly in vulnerable communities.

The change would force the companies to reduce benefits or increase premiums for Medicare beneficiaries, they say, with less money available for doctors to treat conditions like diabetes and depression.

The changes are “stripping funding from prevention and early disease,” said Dr. Patrick Conway, a former Medicare official who is now an executive with Optum, a subsidiary of UnitedHealth that owns one of the nation’s largest physician groups. “As you lower payments for those conditions, you are going to have direct impact on patients.”

Since the proposal was tucked deep in a routine document and published with little fanfare in early February, Medicare officials have been inundated with more than 15,000 comment letters for and against the policies, and roughly two-thirds included identical phrases from form letters. Insurers used television commercials and other strategies to urge Medicare Advantage customers to contact their lawmakers. The effort generated about 142,000 calls or letters to protest the changes, according to the Better Medicare Alliance, one of the lobbying groups involved and the one behind the bowling

The showdown underscores just how important — and lucrative — Medicare Advantage has become to insurers and doctors’ groups that are paid by the federal government to care for older Americans. Roughly $400 billion in taxpayer money went to these private plans last year. Profits on Medicare Advantage plans are at least double what insurers earn from other kinds of policies, according to a recent analysis by the Kaiser Family Foundation.

To the surprise of many in the industry, leaders in Congress have not stepped forward to vigorously defend the private plans.

In interviews this month, top administration health officials said they would not be swayed by the loud outcry from the industry.

“We need strong oversight of this program,” said Dr. Meena Seshamani, Medicare’s top official, adding that the agency was committed to “holding the industry accountable for gaming the system.”

Stacy Sanders, an adviser to Xavier Becerra, the Health and Human Services secretary, said:

“We will not be deterred by industry hacks and deep-pocketed disinformation campaigns.”

Older Americans have flocked to Medicare Advantage, finding that many policies offer lower premiums and more benefits than the traditional government program.

The insurers receive a flat rate for every person they sign up — and get bonuses for those with serious health conditions, because their medical care typically costs more.

But numerous studies from academic researchersgovernment watchdog agencies and federal fraud prosecutions underscore how the insurers have manipulated the system by attaching as many diagnosis codes as possible to their patients’ records to harvest these bonus payments.

Four of the largest five insurers have either settled or are currently facing lawsuits claiming fraudulent coding. Similar lawsuits have also been brought against an array of smaller health plans.

Medicare officials propose eliminating more than 2,000 specific diagnosis codes — about one-fifth of all codes — from the payment formula for these private plans. Regulators homed in on diagnoses that were not associated with more medical care. A handful of diagnoses were removed because they were prone to abuse by the private plans.

Insurers have focused their objections on three common illnesses for which codes would be removed: mild depression; vascular disease; and “diabetes with complications.”

A group of 19 policy experts who support the changes, led by two former Medicare officials, compared the private plans’ “diagnoses” of these particular illnesses against those in traditional Medicare. For example, some Medicare Advantage plans from UnitedHealth reported that half of their patients had vascular disease, in contrast with just 14 percent in the basic government program. UnitedHealth said the study highlighted how its plans provided better care.

Fraud lawsuits brought against the companies also suggest that the plans were deliberately inflating the codes under review by Medicare officials.

In its lawsuit against Cigna last October, for example, the Justice Department described an insurance executive’s email that referred to diabetes with complications; depression; and vascular disease as “the golden nuggets we are looking for.”

In Medicare Advantage, More Diabetes Is ‘Complicated’

Medicare is proposing to simplify diabetes codes, by eliminating payment differences between diabetes with and without complications.

Each bar represents 10 percent of Medicare Advantage contracts, adjusted for enrollment size, sorted by those that diagnose the fewest illnesses to those that code the most.

The insurers are contesting the allegations in court.

Not all of the plans oppose Medicare’s overhaul of the payment regimen. The Alliance of Community Health Plans, which represents nonprofit insurers, supports the Biden administration’s move on this issue, said Ceci Connolly, the group’s chief executive. In its comment letter, the group asked for a one-year delay.

And at least one corporate chief executive, Bruce Broussard of Humana, recently told investors that Medicare’s proposal might not have much impact. At a conference, he said the company usually performs well in years when Medicare is less generous, according to Modern Healthcare. “I feel that 2024 will be that way,” he said.

Medicare Advantage plans are so popular that these changes could affect many people, but the widely publicized lawsuits, audits and reviews have influenced the views of past supporters in Congress. Last year, nearly 80 percent of the members of the House of Representatives signed a letter to Medicare urging its officials to “provide a stable rate and policy environment for Medicare Advantage.”

But this year, support among lawmakers appears to have weakened, despite the avalanche of constituent calls. So many legislators would have dropped from the House letter that the insurance industry has declined to circulate one, several congressional aides said. That shift came in part from increasing awareness of overbilling, but also because of concerns about deceptive marketing and denials of care, they said

Representative Pramila Jayapal, Democrat of Washington, organized a letter this year requesting tougher regulation. It was endorsed by some of the very same House Democrats who had supported last year’s industry letter. “So many people just signed on because they thought, ‘Oh, my constituents are all on Medicare Advantage,’” Ms. Jayapal said. “Members are hearing from constituents because they are not happy, and on the inside we did all this deep education to counter all the lobbyists.”

few Republican lawmakers have raised the proposal to accuse the president of cutting Medicare. The overall Republican response to the rule has been muted, however, with several requests for more information but few attacks on the approach.

Mary Beth Donahue, the chief executive of the Better Medicare Alliance, said the group had been very active in its efforts to educate lawmakers on the complex change, given the compressed time frame.

“The changes are dense,” she said.

Critics of the new Medicare approach argue that the complex change would have unintended consequences counter to other Biden administration priorities. They warn it would disproportionately reduce funding for coverage that serves minority communities and the poorest Medicare patients.

A recent analysis from the actuarial firm Milliman, commissioned by UnitedHealth, showed that the change was likely to have a larger effect on plans that served patients in those circumstances.

In comment letters, several insurance and physician groups argued that the reduced payments would make it harder to provide preventive care for sicker patients.

“It feels like this is a little bit of a hammer to a snail,” said Dr. Clive Fields, the chief medical officer at VillageMD, a developer of primary care clinics. He said he was aware that some plans were engaged in fraudulent overcoding, but said the changes to the formula would mean fewer resources to care for patients with the diagnoses that were removed from the formula.

A growing number of doctors’ practices, including those with VillageMD, have developed relationships with insurers in which they are paid a percentage of premiums, and several doctors’ groups oppose the Medicare proposal.

But Dr. Donald Berwick, a former administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, said allowing private plans to overbill for extra diagnoses was not an appropriate way to finance health services for needy populations.

“It’s paying a very high toll in a very opaque way to get some funds to some people who need more support,” he said. “It’s the wrong tool to solve that problem.”

Dr. Seshamani went further, noting that because Medicare found that the diagnoses were not associated with additional treatment, she did not think the change would have any disproportionate effect on sicker patients: “We are not proposing any policies that would harm vulnerable beneficiaries.”

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Pioneers in Aging – Speaker Series (on-line)

Click here to register for these events

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The news in perspective by Heather Cox Richardson

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What keeps you warm?

The New Yorker Cartoons - The Cartoon Bank
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Recyclable? Try Refillable. The Quest For a Greener Cleaner

By Susan Shain in the NYT — Thanks to Mike C.

Every week, Angela Espinoza Pierson looked at her recycling bin — filled with detergent jugs, shampoo bottles and clamshell containers that once held strawberries — with mixed feelings. Sure, it was a lot of plastic. But it was going to be recycled.

Or so she thought. Then her husband sent her some articles revealing that less than 6 percent of the country’s plastic gets recycled, and that even recycled plastic can only be reused once or twice. Ms. Espinoza Pierson, who lives in Buda, Texas, was shocked. “All the plastic that we thought was getting recycled, it’s not really, and it’s just going to sit there,” she said.

Determined to cut back on her plastic consumption, Ms. Espinoza Pierson got a starter kit from a company selling refillable household cleaners. In it were tablets containing concentrated hand soap as well as multi-surface, glass and bathroom cleaners — and four empty containers. She filled each one with tap water, then dropped in a tablet and watched it dissolve. If she is happy with the cleaners, she will order more tablets but reuse the containers. No new plastic required.

Given plastic’s detrimental effects on the environment, nearly three-quarters of Americans say they are trying to reduce their reliance on single-use plastic, according to Pew Research Center. Since plastic is everywhere and avoiding it altogether is extraordinarily difficult, some, like Ms. Espinoza Pierson, have revived a once-customary practice: refilling containers rather than disposing of them. If just 10 to 20 percent of plastic packaging were reused, a report from the World Economic Forum estimates, the amount of plastic waste entering the ocean could be cut in half.

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Aging with humor

Thanks to Gordon G.

 “The years between 50 and 70 are the hardest.  You are always being asked to do things, and yet you are not decrepit enough to turn them down.”  T.S. Elliot

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 “At age 20, we worry about what others think of us;  at age 40, we don’t care what they think of us; …at age 60, we discover they haven’t been thinking of us at all.”  Ann Landers

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“The important thing to remember is that I’m probably going to forget.”  Unknown

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 “It’s paradoxical that the idea of living a long life appeals to everyone, but the idea of getting old doesn’t appeal to anyone.” ~   Andy  Rooney

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 “The older I get, the better I used to be.”  Lee Trevino

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I was thinking about how people seem to read the Bible a lot more as they get older, and then it dawned on me — they’re cramming for their final exam.”  George Carlin

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“Grandchildren don’t make a man feel old, it’s the knowledge that he’s married to a grandmother that does.”  J. Norman Collie

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“To get back to my youth I would do anything in the world, except exercise, get up early, or be respectable.”  Oscar Wilde\

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“The older we get, the fewer things seem worth waiting in line for.”   Will Rogers

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“We must recognize that, as we grow older, we become like old cars – more and more repairs and replacements are necessary.”  C.S. Lewis

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I’m so old that my blood type is discontinued.”  Bill Dana

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“The older I get, the more clearly I remember things that never happened.  Mark Twain

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“Old people shouldn’t eat healthy foods.  They need all the preservatives they can get.”  Robert Orben

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Great Photos from Nature

Thanks to Yvonne P.

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Obscure and Amazing moments in the 1950s… You probably didn’t know

Ed note: Actually, I’ll bet you remember all of these events!

Click here to watch the video below! Thanks to Sybil-Ann!

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Why Poverty Persists in America

Why Poverty Persists in

A color photograph of a mother and son in a car. Both are holding dogs on their laps and a third dog lays his head over the passenger seat.

By Matthew Desmond

Thanks to Diana C.

  • Published March 9, 2023 Updated March 13, 2023 in the NYT

This article is adapted from Matthew Desmond’s book “Poverty, by America.” It is being published on March 21 by Crown.

In the past 50 years, scientists have mapped the entire human genome and eradicated smallpox. Here in the United States, infant-mortality rates and deaths from heart disease have fallen by roughly 70 percent, and the average American has gained almost a decade of life. Climate change was recognized as an existential threat. The internet was invented.

On the problem of poverty, though, there has been no real improvement — just a long stasis. As estimated by the federal government’s poverty line, 12.6 percent of the U.S. population was poor in 1970; two decades later, it was 13.5 percent; in 2010, it was 15.1 percent; and in 2019, it was 10.5 percent. To graph the share of Americans living in poverty over the past half-century amounts to drawing a line that resembles gently rolling hills. The line curves slightly up, then slightly down, then back up again over the years, staying steady through Democratic and Republican administrations, rising in recessions and falling in boom years.

What accounts for this lack of progress? It cannot be chalked up to how the poor are counted: Different measures spit out the same embarrassing result. When the government began reporting the Supplemental Poverty Measure in 2011, designed to overcome many of the flaws of the Official Poverty Measure, including not accounting for regional differences in costs of living and government benefits, the United States officially gained three million more poor people. Possible reductions in poverty from counting aid like food stamps and tax benefits were more than offset by recognizing how low-income people were burdened by rising housing and health care costs.

The American poor have access to cheap, mass-produced goods, as every American does. But that doesn’t mean they can access what matters most.

Any fair assessment of poverty must confront the breathtaking march of material progress. But the fact that standards of living have risen across the board doesn’t mean that poverty itself has fallen. Forty years ago, only the rich could afford cellphones. But cellphones have become more affordable over the past few decades, and now most Americans have one, including many poor people. This has led observers like Ron Haskins and Isabel Sawhill, senior fellows at the Brookings Institution, to assert that “access to certain consumer goods,” like TVs, microwave ovens and cellphones, shows that “the poor are not quite so poor after all.”

No, it doesn’t. You can’t eat a cellphone. A cellphone doesn’t grant you stable housing, affordable medical and dental care or adequate child care. In fact, as things like cellphones have become cheaper, the cost of the most necessary of life’s necessities, like health care and rent, has increased. From 2000 to 2022 in the average American city, the cost of fuel and utilities increased by 115 percent. The American poor, living as they do in the center of global capitalism, have access to cheap, mass-produced goods, as every American does. But that doesn’t mean they can access what matters most. As Michael Harrington put it 60 years ago: “It is much easier in the United States to be decently dressed than it is to be decently housed, fed or doctored.”

Why, then, when it comes to poverty reduction, have we had 50 years of nothing? When I first started looking into this depressing state of affairs, I assumed America’s efforts to reduce poverty had stalled because we stopped trying to solve the problem. I bought into the idea, popular among progressives, that the election of President Ronald Reagan (as well as that of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in the United Kingdom) marked the ascendancy of market fundamentalism, or “neoliberalism,” a time when governments cut aid to the poor, lowered taxes and slashed regulations. If American poverty persisted, I thought, it was because we had reduced our spending on the poor. But I was wrong.

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The Silicon Valley Back Rescue/Bailout – what does it mean?

Thanks to Frank C. Also see the Op-Ed piece by Paul Krugman in today’s NYT. It remains to be seen, how the jitters play out over the next several days.

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Holding on to “reality”

Outgoing 'New Yorker' Cartoon Editor Says 'Being Funny Is Being Awake' : NPR

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Aggressive Medical Care Remains Common at Life’s End

Ed note: This article reminds us to check and see if our POLST Packet is up to date (the POLST, medical information and durable power of attorney for health care – DPOA-HC). If you’re looking for an excellent book, consider A Beginner’s Guide to the End: Practical Advice for Living Life and Facing Death by Dr. BJ Miller and Shoshana Berger.

By Paula Span March 14, 2023 in the NYT

In July, Jennifer O’Brien got the phone call that adult children dread. Her 84-year-old father, who insisted on living alone in rural New Mexico, had broken his hip. The neighbor who found him on the floor after a fall had called an ambulance.

Ms. O’Brien is a health care administrator and consultant in Little Rock, Ark., and the widow of a palliative care doctor; she knew more than family members typically do about what lay ahead.

James O’Brien, a retired entrepreneur, was in poor health, with heart failure and advanced lung disease after decades of smoking. Because of a spinal injury, he needed a walker. He was so short of breath that, except for quick breaks during meals, he relied on a biPAP, a ventilator that required a tightfitting face mask.

He had standing do-not-resuscitate and do-not-intubate orders, Ms. O’Brien said. They had discussed his strong belief that “if his heart stopped, he would take that to mean that it was his time.”

Listening in on the phone while a hospital palliative care nurse-practitioner talked to her father about his options, Ms. O’Brien provided a blunt translation to an always blunt man: “Dad, your heart and lungs are done.”

The next day, he declined surgery to repair his hip. A startled anesthesiologist and an orthopedist called his daughter, apparently expecting her to talk her father into agreeing to the operation. She didn’t try.

“He was dying,” she said in an interview. “He’d either die comfortably or, with a big surgical incision, he’d die uncomfortably. Or die of something more complicated — potential infections, bowel obstructions, so many things that can happen.” Mortality rates after hip fractures, though improving, remain high.

Her father, who wasn’t cognitively impaired, had decided that surgery was “silly” and unnecessary. She supported his decision and contacted a local hospice.

Families often have to run interference in such scenarios, and a new study in JAMA Network Open helps explain why. The authors, most of them at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, analyzed five years of data from a cancer registry, nursing home assessments and Medicare claims to look at “aggressive end-of-life care” among 146,000 older patients with metastatic cancer.

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How many have you caught today?

Thanks to Sybil-Ann

Rain was pouring down outside O’Connor’s Irish Pub….

 There standing in front of a big puddle outside the pub was an old Irishman, drenched, holding a stick, with a piece of string dangling in the water.
 
A passer-by stopped and asked him, “What are you doing?
 
“Fishing”, replied the old man.
 
Feeling sorry for the old man, the gent says, “Come in out of the rain and have a drink with me.”
 
In the warm ambiance of the pub, as they sip their whiskies, the gentleman, being a bit of a superior smart ass, cannot resist asking, “So how many have you caught today?”
 
“You’re the 8th”, replied the old man…

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