When you look at a painting are you actually seeing the real color? To answer that, let’s take a look at the electromagnetic spectrum.
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Sources:
http://web.atmos.ucla.edu/~fovell/AS3/theory_of_color.html
http://learn.fi.edu/color/ Video Rating: / 5
eHealth Connect Referral Pathways enables the referral network to ensure access to all medical information needed by a patient and their physicians when they need to be treated by a specialist.
Doctor Dies After Getting COVID 19 Vaccine? | Florida Doctor’s Death
An obstetrician/gynecologist (Dr. Gregory Michael) in Miami, Florida, received the 1st dose of the Pfizer vaccine on Dec.18th. Shortly after receiving the Pfizer vaccine, he reportedly developed acute immune thrombocytopenia. He died 16 days after getting the covid vaccine. Dr. Gregory Michael’s cause of death is a result of a brain hemorrhage. Obviously, this is horrible. It’s tragic, and you feel for his family.
But it makes you wonder, was his death a result of the covid 19 vaccines?
And if it resulted from the covid 19 vaccine, should that change your perspective on the covid 19 vaccines?
So I’m going to tell you my thoughts on this, but first, let’s learn a little more about what happened.
Pfizer is actively investigating the case.
Over 10 million people in the United States have received at least one shot of either the Pfizer Covid 19 Vaccine or Moderna Covid 19 Vaccine, the two authorized in the United States. Me personally, I received both doses of the Pfizer vaccine. So far, there have been about 40 cases of anaphylaxis, meaning a severe allergic reaction. None of which were reported as fatal. Many people have had other side effects like sore arms, fatigue, headache, or fever, which typically last a day or so.
The Miami-Dade County medical examiner’s office is investigating Dr. Gregory Michael’s death, and as of right now, there is no official autopsy report. But based on the reports, let’s see what we can make of his case.
Dr. Gregory Michael was healthy. He did not smoke. Did not take any medications. Never had any reaction to any medication nor vaccines. Supposedly three days after he gets the 1st dose of the covid 19 vaccines, he developed tiny reddish spots, or petechiae, caused by bleeding under the skin of his hands and feet.
This prompted him to go to the ER. He gets blood work done, and his platelet levels are low, which is something called thrombocytopenia. Platelets are one of the components of blood clotting. If platelets are too low, it makes people more prone to bleeding. Normal platelet counts range from anywhere from 150 000 to 400 000 or so. People can have spontaneous bleeding, including internal bleeding, but that doesn’t typically happen unless the platelet levels are less than ten thousand. His levels were reportedly zero, and because they’re so low or absent, he gets admitted to the intensive care unit for two weeks. Doctors tried to get his platelet count higher as he had experts from all over the country involved in his care. Presumably, they tried several different treatments. Typically we give platelet transfusions, which is really a blood product that we’re transfusing. But also, we give steroids, specifically glucocorticoids, such as salmeterol or methylprednisolone. If that doesn’t work, we try other drugs like Ramaplastum or eltrombopag to stimulate the bone marrow to make more platelets. Sometimes we give immunoglobulins, sometimes we give a drug called rituximab, which is a monoclonal antibody. If all else fails, the last resort is to take out the spleen because sometimes a spleen plays a role in sequestering and destroying platelets. So they were actually planning on doing a splenectomy, meaning removing his spleen. Still, shortly before that, he ends up developing a hemorrhagic stroke that took his life in a matter of minutes. In other words, he bled into his brain.
A sudden get severe thrombocytopenia to the point of bleeding to death because no matter what the cause is, this kind of thing is incredibly rare. I’ve never had a similar case like this in the intensive care unit. Now there are some cases like this reported with certain drugs medications can lead to thrombocytopenia. As a result of drug-induced antibodies being made by the immune system, they attack the body’s platelets. Drug-induced thrombocytopenia refers to acute immune-mediated thrombocytopenia, and it should be suspected when someone has sudden severe thrombocytopenia.
Doctor Mike Hansen, MD
Internal Medicine | Pulmonary Disease | Critical Care Medicine
Website: https://doctormikehansen.com/
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#covid #covidvaccine #vaccine Video Rating: / 5
How do we revitalize primary health care to make it relevant today and for future generations? At the 71st World Health Assembly, four distinguished experts – Dr Yelzhan Birtanov, Minister of Healthcare of Kazakhstan; Dr Hans Kluge, Director of the Division of Health Systems and Public Health at WHO Europe; Ms Vidhya Ganesh, Deputy Director of UNICEF Programme Division; and Dr Edward Kelley, Director, Service Delivery and Safety at WHO Headquarters, share their thoughts on the legacy of the Alma-Ata Declaration, their vision for primary health care, and encourage all to contribute to the Global Conference on Primary Health Care, taking place in Astana, Kazakhstan on 25-26 October 2018.
Mau berobat di puskesmas?
yuk, manfaatkan antrian online
lokasi: puskesmas ketabang surabaya
terima kasih kepada “bangga surabaya” Video Rating: / 5
Kota Surabaya merupakan pelopor E-Goverment. Salah satunya dalam bidang kesehatan, yaitu melalui layanan E-Health. Sejak dilaunching 10 November 2014 , layanan ini dinilai dapat mengurangi antrian dan jam tunggu pasien di Rumah Sakit dan Puskesmas. Namun sayangnya masih banyak masyarakat yang belum familiar sehingga antrian panjang belum bisa tertangani dengan sempurna. Pemerintah Kota Surabaya terus berkomitmen meningkatkan layanan E-Health agar masyarakat lebih cepat dan mudah mendapat pelayanan kesehatan.
Ikuti berita dengan kemasan internasional berbahasa Indonesia di www.cnnindonesia.com dan channel CNN Indonesia di Transvision. Video Rating: / 5
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), children in U.S. public schools miss 3 million schools days each year due to pink eye. According to the agency, pink eye, or conjunctivitis, is one of the most common and treatable eye conditions in the world and it can affect both children and adults.
Pink eye is an inflammation of the thin, clear tissue that lines the inside of the eyelid (conjunctiva) and the white part of the eyeball. This inflammation makes blood vessels more visible and gives the eye a pink or reddish color.
The CDC reports that some of the main causes and types of pink eye include:
• Viral Conjunctivitis – which is caused by a number of different viruses, such as adenoviruses, and can be very contagious.
• Bacterial Conjunctivitis – there are several types of bacteria that can cause this (Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, Moraxella catarrhalis, or, less commonly, Chlamydia trachomatis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae) and some of these can be easily spread.
• Allergic Conjunctivitis – This is not contagious and is a result of the body’s reaction to allergens, such as pollen from trees, plants, grasses and weeds; dust mites; molds; pet dander; medicines; or cosmetics.
• Conjunctivitis Caused by Irritants – This is also not contagious and is caused by irritation from a foreign body in the eye or contact with swimming pool chlorine, smoke, dust, fumes or chemical vapors. The airborne irritants could be from indoor or outdoor pollution.
In addition to these, there are also other less common causes of pink eye, such as exposure to ameba, parasites and other substances.
According to the CDC, the contagious forms of pink eye can spread from person to person in different ways, often from an infected person to others through:
• Close personal contact, such as touching or shaking hands
• The air by coughing and sneezing
• Touching an object or surface with germs on it, then touching the eyes before washing one’s hands
These are just a few things to know about pink eye and the more common causes of the condition. To learn more about microbial, air quality and environmental causes or other health and safety exposure issues, please visit the websites shown below.
Clark Seif Clark https://www.csceng.com
EMSL Analytical, Inc. https://www.emsl.com
LA Testing https://www.latesting.com
Zimmetry Environmental https://www.zimmetry.com
Healthy Indoors Magazine https://www.healthyindoors.com
David R. Williams, Professor of Public Health at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, has been researching health inequities in the United States for two decades. In this video, he sits down with Don Berwick, MD, President Emeritus and Senior Fellow at IHI, to talk about health equity and why it’s important.
This video will cover the basics of eye accommodation. Included are the basics of the suspensory ligaments (zonules), lens, and ciliary body muscle functions with regard to how it focuses your eye. Video Rating: / 5
In the 1980s, 17,000 healthcare workers used to contract and literally a planeload (300) of healthcare workers died one at a time essentially in silence every year from hepatitis B. The nickname for Hepatitis B during this era was the “healthcare workers” disease. Once there was a vaccine, most healthcare employers still refused to buy the vaccine due the cost (0). It wasn’t until after Labor Unions pushed for a Joint CDC/NIOSH/OSHA Alert in the late 1980s followed by a 5 year campaign resulting in a final OSHA Bloodborne Pathogen Standard (BBP) in 1991 – that required employers to provide the vaccine free of charge – that cases started to plummet. The incidence of occupational hepatitis B infections declined dramatically, from more than 17,000 cases in 1983, before the availability of the vaccine, to 400 in 1995 — a 95% decline and an amazing example of an OSHA success. The protection of healthcare workers from exposures to bloodborne pathogens, a life-threatening occupational risk in healthcare settings, was tragically neglected in the pre-AIDS era. Such exposures, particularly to hepatitis B, long exacted a deadly toll among healthcare workers worldwide. But it was not until the global AIDS epidemic captured the attention of the healthcare community that efforts to reduce this grave occupational risk were set in motion. The first case of needlestick-transmitted HIV was reported in the Lancet in 1984, alerting the healthcare community to this new threat. In 1987, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) documented six cases of occupationally acquired HIV infection in the U.S., a report that sent shock waves through the healthcare community. Pressure was applied to government agencies to take protective action, and the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) a large healthcare worker union and others formally petitioned the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), an agency of the U.S. Department of Labor with authority over employers, to set new standard requiring healthcare employers to upgrade protective measures provided to employees. After several years of hearings and public comment, and intense congressional pressure, the standard was promulgated in 1991. To this day, the OSHA Bloodborne Pathogens Standard (BPP) remains the principal authority protecting U.S. HCWs from bloodborne pathogens. The BBP included provisions requiring employers to establish exposure prevention programs, including the use of personal protective equipment (PPE) such as gloves, fluid-resistant gowns, protective eyewear, masks and other barrier garments to reduce contact with blood and contaminated body fluids; (2) safer handling and disposal of sharp medical devices; (3) hepatitis B vaccine offered at no cost to employees; (4) use of puncture-resistant sharps containers, placed as close as possible to the point-of-use; and (5) annual training of all at-risk workers in the protective measures included in the guidelines.
For more information, go to the OSHA website on Bloodborne Pathogens and Needlestick Prevention at http://www.osha.gov/SLTC/bloodbornepathogens/index.html. This is clipped from the 1992 OSHA video, As It Should Be Done: Workplace Precautions Against Bloodborne Pathogens. 24 minute video explains how workers can protect themselves against occupational exposure to bloodborne pathogens, such as Hepatitis B Virus (HBV) and the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV). This program is targeted primarily to health care workers and related professionals. The entire video is available on the OSHA website and at the Internet Archive. Video Rating: / 5
On November 28, 2016, Scott Klarenbach, MD, Professor and Clinician Scientist in the Department of Medicine at the University of Alberta, delivered an in-person and webinar lecture as part of the CADTH Lecture Series entitled “An Introduction to Health Economics.”
Chris Painter and Wrik Ghosh from Costello Medical Consulting explain what health economics is and why it is important in rare disease medicines. Check out the ‘What is health economics guide’ on our e-learning portal for more info! portal.findacure.org.uk.