Dis-learning DeSantis

Thanks to Pam P.

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SEEKING VOLUNTEERS FOR THE MEMORY HUB

Do you enjoy hospitality and connecting with people? Would you like to be part of building a welcoming and vibrant community center for people with memory loss and their families, here on First Hill? Join the team at the new Memory Hub as a Front Desk Volunteer! Operated by the UW Memory and Brain Wellness Center, the Memory Hub provides a variety of resources and programs such as support groups, caregiver education, creative arts, nature engagement, and more.  We are currently seeking Front Desk Volunteers for a half day shift on Tuesdays, Wednesdays or Thursdays. Learn more about memory loss resources and meet a variety of dynamic organizations on-site, while you help others get connected to valuable support. Meet our current volunteers in this recent article. For more information, please see this position description, fill out this brief interest form, or reach out to Debra Cayz, Operations Lead, at 206-221-8284 or debcayz@uw.edu.  

Marigrace Becker

Program Manager, Community Education & Impact

Director, The Memory Hub

UW Memory and Brain Wellness Center

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‘We’re Still Gonna Say No’: Inside UnitedHealthcare’s Effort to Deny Coverage to Chronically Ill

Thanks to Sandy J.

After a college student finally found a treatment that worked, the insurance giant decided it wouldn’t pay for the costly drugs. His fight to get coverage exposed the insurer’s hidden procedures for rejecting claims.


KEY TAKEAWAYS

Christopher McNaughton suffered from a crippling case of ulcerative colitis — an ailment that caused him to develop severe arthritis, debilitating diarrhea, numbing fatigue and life-threatening blood clots. His medical bills were running nearly $2 million a year.

United had flagged McNaughton’s case as a ‘high dollar account,’ and the company was reviewing whether it needed to keep paying for the expensive cocktail of drugs crafted by a Mayo Clinic specialist that had brought McNaughton’s disease under control.

This article was published on Thursday, February 2, 2023 in ProPublica.

By David Armstrong, Patrick Rucker and Maya Miller

In May 2021, a nurse at UnitedHealthcare called a colleague to share some welcome news about a problem the two had been grappling with for weeks.

United provided the health insurance plan for students at Penn State University. It was a large and potentially lucrative account: lots of young, healthy students paying premiums in, not too many huge medical reimbursements going out.

But one student was costing United a lot of money. Christopher McNaughton suffered from a crippling case of ulcerative colitis — an ailment that caused him to develop severe arthritis, debilitating diarrhea, numbing fatigue and life-threatening blood clots. His medical bills were running nearly $2 million a year.

United had flagged McNaughton’s case as a “high dollar account,” and the company was reviewing whether it needed to keep paying for the expensive cocktail of drugs crafted by a Mayo Clinic specialist that had brought McNaughton’s disease under control after he’d been through years of misery.

On the 2021 phone call, which was recorded by the company, nurse Victoria Kavanaugh told her colleague that a doctor contracted by United to review the case had concluded that McNaughton’s treatment was “not medically necessary.” Her colleague, Dave Opperman, reacted to the news with a long laugh.

“I knew that was coming,” said Opperman, who heads up a United subsidiary that brokered the health insurance contract between United and Penn State. “I did too,” Kavanaugh replied.

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British barber shop

Thanks to Sybil-Ann

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Why?

Thanks to Sybil-Ann

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When scientists tagged a curious seal, he led them to signs of a potential climate disaster

from the Washington Post (thanks to Pam P.)

This is a story about a curious seal, a wayward robot and a gigantic climate change disaster that may be waiting to happen.

Scientists tagged a southern elephant seal on the island of Kerguelen, an extraordinarily remote spot in the far southern Indian Ocean, in 2011. The seal was a male close to 11 feet long weighing nearly 1,800 pounds, and they fitted his head with an ocean sensor, a device that these massive seals barely notice but that have proved vital to scientific research.

Click here for the full article

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Pillow talk

“is That All You Can Think About?” Art Print featuring the drawing Is that all you can think about by Carolita Johnson
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‘My Watch Thinks I’m Dead’

Dispatchers for 911 are being inundated with false, automated distress calls from Apple devices owned by skiers who are very much alive.

Ed note: The Apple watch can is having problems with skiers, but many seniors find it an ideal safety tool–it can detect your fall, ask if you are OK, call 911 if you don’t respond and can use GPS to help responders find you.

By Matt Richtel Feb. 3, 2023 in the NYT

FRISCO, Colo. — On a recent sunny Sunday morning, following a night of fluffy snowfall, tens of thousands of skiers flocked to the resorts of Summit County. Just minutes after the lift lines opened, sirens began blaring in the 911 emergency service center, where four staff members were taking calls and dispatching help.

Each jarring alert was a new incoming call, heralding a possible car crash, heart attack or other life-threatening situation. Often, the phone operators heard a chilling sound at the far end of the line: silence, perhaps from a caller too incapacitated to respond.

At 9:07 a.m., one dispatcher, Eric Betts, responded to such a call. From the map on one of the seven monitors on his desk, he could see that the distress call originated from a slope at the Arapahoe Basin Ski Area. Mr. Betts tried calling back. A man picked up.

“Do you have an emergency?” Mr. Betts asked. No, the man said, he was skiing — safely, happily, unharmed. Slightly annoyed, he added, “For the last three days, my watch has been dialing 911.”

Winter has brought a decent amount of snowfall to the region’s ski resorts, and with it an avalanche of false emergency calls. Virtually all of them have been placed by Apple Watches or iPhone 14s under the mistaken impression that their owners have been debilitated in collisions.

As of September, these devices have come equipped with technology meant to detect car crashes and alert 911 dispatchers. It is a more sensitive upgrade to software on Apple devices, now several years old, that can detect when a user falls and then dial for help. But the latest innovation appears to send the device into overdrive: It keeps mistaking skiers, and some other fitness enthusiasts, for car-wreck victims.

Lately, emergency call centers in some ski regions have been inundated with inadvertent, automated calls, dozens or more a week. Phone operators often must put other calls, including real emergencies, on hold to clarify whether the latest siren has been prompted by a human at risk or an overzealous device.

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Thoughts about aging

Thanks to Rosemary W.

“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

“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

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

“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

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

“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

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

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

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

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

“Inside every older person is a younger person wondering what happened.”  Jennifer Yane

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

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

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

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A little math problem

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The Battle Hymn of the Republic

Notes from Heather Cox Richardson (thanks to Pam P.)

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Support for memory loss

The UW Memory and Brain Wellness Clinic is open for the needs of our patients, including visits by phone, video conference, or in person. If you have an upcoming appointment, you will be contacted beforehand to explore what visit format is best.

Please check the latest newsletter and updates from the UW Memory and Brain Wellness Center. Click here for information.

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Hear no evil, speak no evil ….

Buy Signed Print of My New Yorker Cartoon i Have Very Online in India - Etsy

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Pro or Con – make your opinion known

EOL Washington has proposed legislation to improve Medical Aid in Dying (MAID) care and access. See below.

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It’s not over ’till it’s over

This is an interesting, even breathtaking couple of photos. l

Be sure to read the 1st caption below the picture before going to the 2nd photo.  Look closely at the first photo take your time, then scroll down very slowly…

image

Look at the picture above and you can see where this driver broke through the guardrail, on the right side of the culvert,
where the people are standing on the road, pointing….

The pick-up was traveling about 75 mph from right to left when it crashed through the guardrail.

It flipped end-over-end and bounced off and across the culvert outlet,

And landed right-side up on the left side of the culvert, facing the opposite direction from which the driver was traveling.


The 22-year-old driver and his 18-year-old passenger were unhurt except for minor cuts and bruises.

Just outside Flagstaff, AZ, on U.S. Hwy 100.




Now, look at the second picture below…

image


If God isn’t done with you, Then God isn’t done with You.

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Édouard Manet’s Life in 5 Short Facts

Ann M. suggests that art lovers may enjoy this brief, free daily publication about artists and art history: https://mailchi.mp/dailyartmagazine.com/manet-the-white-lotus-botero-in-colombia?e=592b4e5f70

The email to subscribe is: newsletter@dailyartmagazine.com

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ArtSEA: Flower power beats winter blues at Seattle galleries

by Brangien Davis in Crosscut

Plus, new arts leaders take the reins at Pratt, Coyote Central and the Frye Art Museum.

an abstract painting with splotches in multicolors

For a joyous and much-needed jolt from the January gray, step into Woodside Braseth Gallery, where an immersive explosion of color comes courtesy of the new show Alden Mason & the “Burpee Garden” Series (through Feb. 10). A prolific Northwest painter, Mason (1919-2013) worked in several distinct styles over his long career.


This one — inspired by the Burpee Seed Company packets he remembered from his rural Skagit Valley youth — bloomed during the 1970s with titles like “Rainbow Teaser,” “Winter Zinger,” “Orange Bingo” and “Butterfly Twinkler.”Next: ArtSEA: Bunny-hopping at Seattle galleries in the year of the rabbit

Mason made these huge Technicolor works by laying the canvases on the floor and standing over them on a specially constructed low bridge. Starting with oils and diluting them with paint thinners, he achieved an intriguing depth of field and abstract images that shift like clouds from deep pools to mica-like scales to fiery pits and yes, flowers — that is if you shoved your face right into a bouquet.

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It seems like yesterday

Thanks to Rosemary W.

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Also, stay off ladders

Thanks to Sybil-Ann

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The causes don’t match either!

Thanks to Pam P.

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Skyline, 2/3s complete

This Google Street View, from the St. James side of the 9th & Columbia intersection looking SW, likely dates from 2006. The Tower is up to the 17th floor above 8th Avenue, ten to go on the front side’s shed roof. The Terraces has topped out.

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Mind-Body problem

The Mind-body Problem Decision Poster featuring the drawing The Mind Body Problem by Roz Chast
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Graystone tower crane

They have moved the external cage up to the top, likely a sign that you can watch the takedown process this weekend or next. The cage supports the top while a multistory section is unbolted and slid out sideways.

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No more Amazon donations to SRA

Amazon announces end to its decade long charity program, leaving charities that rely on the company’s donations in a lurch. Author: Associated PressPublished: 12:29 PM PST January 25, 2023Updated: 12:29 PM PST January 25, 2023

SEATTLE — Amazon’s surprise decision to shut down its AmazonSmile donation program has left thousands of its nonprofit beneficiaries disappointed and concerned about finding ways to replace the funding.

The e-commerce giant had launched AmazonSmile in 2013, contributing 0.5% of every purchase made by participating customers to the charity of their choosing. As of 2022, the company said it has donated $449 million to various charities

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WE NEED MORE STORIES LIKE THIS

Thanks to Sybil-Ann

Weird-Random-Facts
Weird-Random-Facts
Weird-Random-Facts
Weird-Random-Facts
Weird-Random-Facts
Weird-Random-Facts
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