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Chinese New Year and Reasons to Make Resolutions

1/27/2017

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2017 The Year of the Rooster and What It Means

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2017 Is a Fire Rooster Year — What ”Fire Rooster Year” MeansIn Chinese astrology, each zodiac year is not just associated with an animal sign, but also one of five elements: Gold (Metal), Wood, Water, Fire, or Earth.
Both the zodiac sign and the element shape the astrology of the year. For example, 2017 is a Fire Rooster year. Element-sign combinations recur every 60 years.

Both zodiac sign and element are believed to affect one’s personality and destiny. Below are the five types of Roosters:


Type of Rooster             Year of Birth                        Characteristics

Wood Rooster                  1945, 2005                  Energetic, overconfident, tender, and unstable
Fire Rooster                      1957, 2017                  Trustworthy, with a strong sense of timekeeping and responsibility at work
Earth Rooster                   1909, 1969                   Lovely, generous, trustworthy, and popular with their friends
Gold Rooster                    1921, 1981                   Determined, brave, perseverant, and hardworking
Water Rooster                  1933, 1993                   Smart, quick-witted, tenderhearted, and compassionate

Time to re-set your New Year's Resolutions now. It's a great way to begin again!

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Happy Holidays to All! Be safe this holiday season!

12/24/2015

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"Christmas gift suggestions:
To your enemy, forgiveness.
To an opponent, tolerance.
To a friend, your heart.
To a customer, service.
To all, charity.
To every child, a good example.
To yourself, respect."
~ Oren Arnold

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Workers Compensation and the Most Dangerous Industries in the U.S.

11/12/2015

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Eastern Kentucky University
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Caren Peet's Legacy - September is Baby Safety Month

9/8/2015

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Babies are Caren Peet’s passion. The Smithtown mother of two is known as Long Island’s adoption guru and has been an active participant in more than 2,300 adoptions over the past 20 years.

Waiting to adopt a child can be agonizing, as Caren knows well. Waiting means you’re being asked repeatedly how things are progressing, you’re constantly checking your email in case a birth mother is trying to reach you, and as it drags on, you can feel like you’re the only childless couple left on Long Island.

Waiting to adopt can also mean hope and anxiety and ultimately, joy.

As an adoptive parent herself, Caren is especially attuned to the myriad emotions that adoptive couples feel and she brings her own special sensitivity to the process.

Caren decision to adopt was due to an inherited genetic disorder, Neurofibromatosis, a disorder that can develop into multiple soft tumors under the skin and throughout the nervous system, and can be passed on to biological children. For Caren and her husband Kenny, there was no question that they would adopt. Their eldest, Justin, was adopted domestically in 1990 and their daughter, Heather, was adopted from Guatemala in 1997.

After her own experience, Caren decided to focus her career on adoption social work so she could help other couples experience the joy that she felt. “I thought ‘This is cool to do,’” she says.

The first step in what is a long and arduous journey to a successful adoption is a home visit from the adoption social worker. For many couples, the stress of that visit can be almost overwhelming, fearing that the social worker will find fault with something that will end their dream of having a family.

“I am the person giving permission to proceed with the adoption,” Caren explains. She provides the home-study portion of the process, checking references, job history, and criminal records. Then she submits her written report to the court, attorney and adoption agency, as well as the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service.

Through the years she has built up a solid reputation with prospective couples, singles and non-traditional families as being kind, considerate and understanding, and being able to put them at ease.

“You let us know that you were on our side,” one new mother told her.

“You helped guide us and explain what was expected and what would happen next,” said another of Caren’s cases. “Not everyone took the time, but you did.”

It can take 18 months or longer to adopt a child, depending whether it’s being done domestically or internationally. Caren says she has facilitated adoptions from Montauk to China.

As the chairperson of the L.I. Chapter of the Children’s Relief Committee for the Adoptive Parents Committee, Caren collects donations of clothing, toiletries and other needed items for orphanages all over the world and has the families traveling to pick up their child hand-deliver them.

But there is much more to Caren’s story. She provides her services and expertise to the Children of Hope Foundation/Baby Safe Haven, working closely with founder, Tim Jaccard, who started the organization in 1997. The original mission was to help pay for the burials of unclaimed infants who were abandoned but now Safe Haven’s goal is to prevent unwanted babies from dying by offering mothers safe locations where they can leave their infants without fear of arrest or other ramifications.

Since its inception, Safe Haven, which is accessible 24/7 nationwide, has saved hundreds of babies.

“Spreading the word is the only way for people to know about the Safe Haven Law,” said Caren, who does her part by social networking especially on Facebook, as well as speaking at events.

“If my information helped save a newborn because I was seen at a health fair or spoke at a high school, then I have to keep going,” she says.

Safe Haven operates its hotline through the Bellmore-based Long Island Crisis Center, where calls are first screened, and then, if needed, forwarded to Caren. She says she receives about three calls a week from young women asking for help.

Recently, a 17-year-old from Wisconsin had just given birth and called the hotline. “She had no one to talk to and she trusted us,” Caren says.

She counseled the young mother and asked her to bring her baby to the local firehouse where the baby was found alive and well.

“That happens all the time,” Caren says.

She recently traveled to Yonkers to help a young woman who needed a C-section. “I called my friend, a paramedic EMT,” Caren says, “and we brought her to the hospital.

“If I can physically get to her, I will,’ she vows, “or we’ll network to get her help if I can’t.”

On Long Island the tragic case of Thomas John Hope, an infant boy discovered in a Yaphank refuse facility almost two years ago, has continued to resonate, possibly saving other infants’ from suffering the same fate. Since Thomas’ death, more than 12 babies have been saved on LI and the surrounding area by Safe Haven because of his story. “It has a rippling effect,” she says.

Caren also works closely with the national organization Guardians of the Children. “They are bikers who help abused children,” she says. Although she doesn’t ride a motorcycle, she helps at their local events.

The Guardians gave her an official vest that is now covered in pins and patches. Her starfish pin holds special meaning to Caren because it refers to the “Starfish Poem,” adopted from an essay by the late Loren Eisley.

Many of the connections that Caren has made throughout the community have compelled her to make a difference in areas outside of adoption and babies.

She is part of a group helping a paralyzed Hempstead police officer by bringing him a supply of homemade food twice a month donated by Upper Crust Food. Now she’s forming her own nonprofit group called “Donate A Dish,” a simple concept that can make a tremendous difference in the life of the recipient.

But saving babies will always be Caren’s first priority.

“Adoption is what I do, but Safe Haven is what I am,” she says. “That’s my mission: to keep babies safe.”

For more information go to www.Adoption-SocialWork.com, or call 631-366-3434 or email CarenCares4Kids@gmail.com The Safe Haven crisis hotline is 1-877-796-HOPE. All calls are confidential, as protected under the Safe Haven Law.

http://www.adoption-socialwork.com/www.adoption-socialwork.com
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August is “What Will Be Your Legacy” Month

7/26/2015

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What is your legacy going to be?  TIme to refresh or rearrange the New Year resolution list? This is the perfect month to begin!

Ralph Waldo Emerson's quote about success is always one of my ambitions. 'To laugh often and much; To win the respect of intelligent people and the affection of children; To earn the appreciation of honest critics and endure the betrayal of false friends; To appreciate beauty, to find the best in others; To leave the world a bit better, whether by a healthy child, a garden patch, or a redeemed social condition; To know even one life has breathed easier because you have lived. This is to have succeeded.'
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May is National Building Safety Month

4/30/2015

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NATIONAL BUILDING SAFETY MONTH, 2015

- – – – – – -

BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

A PROCLAMATION

From skyscrapers and schools to hospitals and homes, America's buildings are the foundations of our communities.  When disasters strike, we rely on the structural integrity of our buildings to keep us safe.  This month, we pay tribute to the innovative professionals who implement our safety standards, and we redouble our efforts to make our buildings as resilient as our people.

All Americans can take action to protect their loved ones and their property by preparing their homes and workplaces for any disaster.  If earthquakes are common where you live, you can restrain heavy appliances, anchor tall bookcases and file cabinets, and install latches on drawers and cabinet doors.  To protect against hurricanes, tornadoes, and high winds, you can reinforce garage doors and prepare covers for your windows and house doors.  To learn more about how to prepare for all types of disasters and improve the safety and resilience of the places in which you spend time, visit Ready.gov.

My Administration is committed to creating stronger, safer, disaster-resistant communities and to empowering Americans to do their part.  We are collaborating with engineers, scientists, construction workers, and other professionals to develop cutting-edge tools focused on bolstering the safety of our buildings and infrastructure while also improving their energy efficiency — because we can increase our Nation's resilience while also being good stewards of our environment.  And we are working with States, tribal leaders, and local partners to ensure neighborhoods across our Nation adopt the most up-to-date building codes and standards that not only help protect individuals and their families, but also support the needs of our cities and towns.

As our Nation faces longer wildfire seasons, more severe droughts, heavier rainfall, and more frequent flooding in a changing climate, safeguarding the resilience of our infrastructure is more critical than ever.  That is why, as part of my Climate Action Plan, my Administration is committed to building infrastructure that can withstand more frequent and more devastating natural disasters.  To support these efforts, earlier this year I established a flood standard for new and rebuilt federally funded structures in and around floodplains, ensuring taxpayer dollars are well spent on resilient infrastructure while reducing the risk and cost of future flood disasters.

Across the United States, buildings bring us together and protect us from harm.  As a Nation, our capacity to continue to withstand threats and recover quickly from disaster depends on what we do today.  During National Building Safety Month, let us rededicate ourselves to making the places we live, work, and play more stable and secure for generations to come.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, BARACK OBAMA, President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim May 2015 as National Building Safety Month.  I encourage citizens, government agencies, businesses, nonprofits, and other interested groups to join in activities that raise awareness about building safety.  I also call on all Americans to learn more about how they can contribute to building safety at home and in their communities.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this thirtieth day of April, in the year of our Lord two thousand fifteen, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and thirty-ninth.

BARACK OBAMA


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Earthquake Safety

3/29/2015

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Unlike hurricanes and some other natural hazards, earthquakes strike suddenly and without warning. Nevertheless, if you live in an area at risk for earthquakes, there are things that you can do to reduce the chances that you or other members of your household will be injured, that your property will be damaged, or that your home life will be unduly disrupted by an earthquake. These things all fit under the term preparedness, because to be effective, they must be done before earthquakes occur.Preparing for earthquakes involves (1) learning what people should do before, during, and after earthquakes; and (2) doing or preparing to do those things now, before the next quake.



Before the Next EarthquakeFollowing are activities that you can undertake now:

Prepare Your HomeMake your home safer to be in during earthquakes and more resistant to earthquake damage by assessing its structure and contents. Depending on when and how it was designed and built, the structure you live in may have weaknesses that make it more vulnerable to earthquakes. Common examples include structures not anchored to their foundations or having weak crawl space walls, unbraced pier-and-post foundations, or unreinforced masonry walls or foundations.

If you own your home, find and correct any such weaknesses, yourself or with professional help. If you are a renter, ask what has been done to strengthen the property against earthquakes, and consider this information in deciding where to rent. If you are building or buying a home, make sure that it complies with the seismic provisions of your local building code.

What is in your home can be as or more dangerous and damage-prone than the structure itself. Any unsecured objects that can move, break, or fall as an earthquake shakes your home are potential safety hazards and potential property losses. Walk through each room of your home and make note of these items, paying particular attention to tall, heavy, or expensive objects such as bookcases, home electronics, appliances (including water heaters), and items hanging from walls or ceilings. Secure these items with flexible fasteners, such as nylon straps, or with closed hooks, or by relocating them away from beds and seating, to lower shelves, or to cabinets with latched doors. Ensure that plumbers have installed flexible connectors on all gas appliances.


Prepare Yourself and Your Family to

  • React Safely
    Learn what to do during an earthquake. Hold periodic family drills to practice what you have learned. Through practice, you can condition yourselves to react spontaneously and safely when the first jolt or shaking is felt.
     
  • Take Cover
    In each room of your home, identify the safest places to “drop, cover, and hold on” during an earthquake. Practice going to these safe spots during family drills to ensure that everyone learns where they are.
     
  • Survive on Your Own
    Assemble and maintain a household emergency supply kit, and be sure that all family members know where it is stored. The kit should consist of one or two portable containers (e.g., plastic tubs, backpacks, duffel bags) holding the supplies that your family would need to survive without outside assistance for at least 3 days following an earthquake or other disaster. Make additional, smaller kits to keep in your car(s) and at your place(s) of work.
     
  • Stay in Contact
    List addresses, telephone numbers, and evacuation sites for all places frequented by family members (e.g., home, workplaces, schools). Include the phone number of an out-of-state contact. Ensure that family members carry a copy of this list, and include copies in your emergency supply kits.
     
  • Care for People, Pets, and Property
    Get training in first aid and cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) through your local chapter of the American Red Cross. Find out where you could shelter your pet should it become necessary to evacuate your home. Ensure that family members know how and when to call 9-1-1, how to use your home fire extinguisher, and how, where, and when to shut off your home’s utilities (water, natural gas, and electricity). Ask your state insurance commissioner about the availability of earthquake insurance in your state.




After the Next EarthquakeOnce the shaking stops, check for injuries among your family and neighbors and, as needed, administer first aid and call for emergency medical assistance. Also check for hazards in and around your home created by earthquake damage. Keep in mind that aftershocks may strike at any time, exacerbating these hazards and requiring you to immediately drop, cover, and hold on.

Responding promptly to hazards can prevent further damage and injuries. This may entail extinguishing small fires or reporting larger blazes; shutting off the water supply when broken pipes are leaking; shutting off the electricity when damaged wiring threatens to spark fires; shutting off the natural gas when you suspect that gas is leaking; or evacuating your home when any of these hazards or others, such as structural damage, make continued occupancy potentially unsafe.

If it is necessary to leave your home, you may, in the days and weeks following the quake, need to seek emergency assistance from the American Red Cross. In the event of a presidential disaster declaration, assistance for housing and other needs may also become available from FEMA.

Regardless of the severity of this earthquake, learn from the experience. If there are things that you could have done better in preparing for this quake, do them better now in preparation for the next earthquake. If your home must be repaired or rebuilt, for example, use this opportunity to correct any structural weaknesses and ensure compliance with seismic building standards. If unsecured belongings were damaged, improve how you secure your home’s contents. If your emergency supply kit proved inadequate, use what you learned to make a kit that will better meet your needs.

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To Spine Board or Not - Suggestions from a Paramedic

3/11/2015

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Emergency transportation
The Gathering of Eagles is held in Dallas Texas every year and is a source of many new ideas for the EMS Community.  It's members are many of the leading Medical Directors in the country.

In their 2014 conference Dr. Valenzuela and Dr. Fowler discussed the topic "To Spine Board or Not".  

We believe this analysis will provide a third way to address this issue other than use them or don't use them.

Analysis

Backboards are a tool for transport of patients that must remain supine.  A subset of this group is patients that require spinal immobilization.  These two groups are not equal.  There are many instances where patients require transport in the supine position but don't require spinal immobilization.  Some examples are;

  • patient is unresponsive or has an altered level of consciousness

  • patient cannot sit up

  • patient is obese, lying on the floor and unable to get to a standing position

  • patient can't walk and exit won't allow for stair chair (scissor staircase or tight corner)

  • patient is bed confined or bed ridden

  • patient is paraplegic

  • patient is most comfortable lying down (position of comfort)

  • patient requires compressions during transport

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If a patient is in a building that does not allow for a cot to be rolled to the location (e.g. upper floor with no elevator, mobile home, etc.) then they must be transported to the cot before placing in the ambulance

 

In all of these situations a backboard or stretcher is required.

 

Two additional issues that have been raised.

  • The overuse of spinal immobilization and its potential to do harm.

  • Pressure sores caused by prolonged contact with hard surfaces.

     

     

    Proposed Solutions

     

  • First, clarify that backboard use for supine patient transport is acceptable when circumstances do not allow access with a gurney.

  • Secondly, clarify that spinal immobilization should be minimized to use only when appropriate;

    • Provide specific guidance, such as in IL region 10's In-field  Spinal Clearance protocol, to clarify when spinal immobilization should or should not be used.

    • This protocol considers mechanism of injury (MOI), signs and symptoms (S&S) and patient reliability (PR).

    • some examples are;

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Homeland Security runs out of money this week unless Congress acts

2/23/2015

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For Immediate Release:February 20, 2015

Contact:Mariel Saez 202-225-3130

WASHINGTON, DC – House Democratic Whip Steny H. Hoyer (MD) released the following statement today, which marks one week until the Department of Homeland Security shuts down unless Congress acts:

“With just one week left before the Department of Homeland Security runs out of funding, Congress must act swiftly to pass a clean funding measure to ensure our homeland security agencies have the resources needed to meet the challenges we face.  If the Republican-controlled Congress shuts down the Department on February 27, thousands of agents would be furloughed, along with thousands forced to work without pay, and first responders across the country would be left without important federal support. 

“Democrats continue to support a clean bill at the funding levels agreed to by both parties in December, and every Member of our Caucus would join with Republicans to send such a bill to the President – without the partisan provisions that hold our homeland security hostage to deporting millions of immigrant children and their parents.  If Republicans want to change our immigration policies, they ought to bring a comprehensive immigration reform bill to the Floor and work in a bipartisan way to enact it.  I strongly urge the Speaker and Majority Leader to let the House vote this coming week to keep the Department of Homeland Security open so that it can keep ore Americans safe.” 

More on this...
Homeland Security runs out of money this week unless Congress actsFeb 22, 2015William Douglas, McClatchy Washington BureauWASHINGTON -- Congress will return to work Monday with only four days left to pass a Department of Homeland Security funding bill and avert a partial agency shutdown and the furlough of about 30,000 federal employees.

Most of the department's employees would be deemed "essential" and kept working even if the Congress and President Barack Obama don't agree in time. The nation's airports, borders and political leaders would continue to be protected during a partial shutdown.

But even those who work would be unsure of their paychecks until Congress finds a way to fund the agency beyond Friday, when it runs out of money.

The operative word on Capitol Hill is "stuck." Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., has been unable to move a bill that would provide the department with $40 billion through September, because of a Democratic filibuster over added language that would reverse some of Obama's executive actions on immigration.

House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, isn't budging on his demand that McConnell's Senate act on the bill passed by the House and not look to his chamber for help.

"The House has done its job under the Constitution," Boehner said. "It's time for the Senate to do their job."

Democrats and a few Republicans in both chambers are pressing for a "clean" bill, without the immigration-related amendments, arguing that not funding the department when the Islamic State and other groups are committing terrorist acts worldwide would be political suicide.

The White House will try to keep the heat on Congress when Obama hosts a nationally televised town hall meeting on immigration Wednesday in Miami.

Even though Senate Democrats are blocking the bill, most Americas would blame Republicans if there's a partial shutdown, according to a CNN/ORC poll released this week.

Fifty-three percent of poll respondents would blame congressional Republicans for a Homeland Security closing, while 30 percent would blame Obama, the survey found. Only 13 percent of those surveyed Americans blamed both congressional Republicans and the White House.

Some lawmakers, such as Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., think a federal judge in Texas threw Congress a lifeline last week when he issued an injunction blocking Obama's actions to shield from deportation more than 4 million immigrants who live in the United States illegally.

"It's not a good idea . . . to shut down the Department of Homeland Security," McCain said Thursday on MSNBC. "And now we've got a perfect reason to not shut it down because the courts have decided, at least initially, in our favor."

But instead of softening the debate, U.S. District Judge Andrew Hanen's ruling appears to have hardened both sides.

"Senate Democrats -- especially those who've voiced opposition to the president's executive overreach -- should end their partisan filibuster of Department of Homeland Security funding," McConnell said after Hanen's decision.

Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said, "Democrats' offer to first fund Homeland Security and then debate immigration stands. All Republicans have to do is say yes."

Outside groups are pressuring lawmakers to hold the line.

"What we want is for Congress to pass a clean DHS bill and for the parties to come together to pass a comprehensive immigration bill," said Hector Sanchez, chairman of the National Hispanic Leadership Agenda.

Kevin Broughton, communications director for the Tea Party Patriots, said it was time for Republicans to make good on campaign vows to address Obama's executive actions.

"The point is that Republicans last fall went hard against executive amnesty. ... Now is not the time to lose your nerve," he said

With the fate of the funding bill uncertain, the agency is preparing for a possible partial shutdown. DHS officials said 30,000 employees -- about 15 percent of its workforce -- might be furloughed.

That group would include 5,500 of the Transportation Security Administration's employees but exclude federal air marshals.

Front-line divisions such as the TSA, Customs and Border Protection, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and the Coast Guard would continue to operate.

(c)2015 McClatchy Washington Bureau

Visit the McClatchy Washington Bureau at www.mcclatchydc.com

Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC











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Attitude Equals 100%

2/13/2015

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If success was a formula, it would look like this.
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