I met Carmen at her obstetrician’s office today. It was fun! We still cannot hear the heartbeat since she is only a little over 8 weeks along. So we made another “nurse” appointment for two weeks from today to hear the heartbeat.
I can’t wait!
I met Carmen at her obstetrician’s office today. It was fun! We still cannot hear the heartbeat since she is only a little over 8 weeks along. So we made another “nurse” appointment for two weeks from today to hear the heartbeat.
I can’t wait!
I’m going with Carmen to the doctor this Wednesday. I’m so excited and nervous at the same time! We are hoping to hear the heartbeat.
Carmen came to see me on Saturday and brought me the loveliest bouquet of flowers for Mother’s Day!
Residents in Utah without health insurance increased by 40,000 in one year.
The ranks of Utah’s uninsured grew by 1 percent between 2004 and 2005, according to a recently released report from the Utah Department of Health.
There are about 300,000 Utahns without health insurance and 46 million Americans. The latter figure includes about 8 million children. According to the Deseret News article quoted above, Gov. Jon Huntsman has created a working group to study this issue and address the root cause of the alarming fact that so many of us are without health insurance.
I have been without health insurance for most of the last decade, so I can speak from personal experience to this issue.
The “root” cause is the profit-making corporate nature of health insurance companies and health care providers, including hospitals and nursing homes.
Health care is a basic human right. It is addressed and provided for in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, a document which the U.S. became a signatory in 1948. To wit:
Article 25.
(1) Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of himself and of his family, including food, clothing, housing and medical care and necessary social services, and the right to security in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old age or other lack of livelihood in circumstances beyond his control.
There is no humane reason why so many Americans, and worldwide citizens for that matter, should suffer as a result of not being able to afford health care. It’s a basic human right.
Wasatch Front and Ogden Schools have decided to keep “non-diet” sodas out of public schools in vending machines. Vendors will be supplying “healthier” drinks with lower caloric content instead.
Under the agreement, diet soda that contains less than 10 calories per serving would still be sold in public high schools but only unsweetened juice, low-fat milk and water would be sold in elementary and middle schools.
This is a good start, but diet sodas contain aspartame and caffeine – two drugs that can potentially have serious side effects…..especially on developing children.
See information from the Aspartame Toxicity Info Center and FAQ’s on caffeine.
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