Health
Asthma and Allergy Epidemic
Among the recent anti-science, ignorant drivel from right wing Republicans was the tirade by radio talk show host Michael Savage. In the same tirade where he showed his ignorance and insensitivity towards children with autism, Savage also attacked children with asthma:
"[W]hy was there an asthma epidemic amongst minority children? Because I'll tell you why: The children got extra welfare if they were disabled, and they got extra help in school. It was a money racket. Everyone went in and was told [fake cough], 'When the nurse looks at you, you go [fake cough], "I don't know, the dust got me." ' See, everyone had asthma from the minority community."
This is just stupid. Really literally stupid, as well as mean-spirited. There is real science out there regarding the asthma epidemic and related allergy epidemic.
allergy | Asthma | Health | science
Brooklyn's Top Polluters and You
Here's an interesting rundown of the polluters in Brooklyn from the Josh Skaller for City Council website. The worst polluters in Brooklyn are (not in order): Con Edison - Hudson Ave Station, Gowanus Generating Station, Kings Plaza Total Energy Plant, American Sugar Refining Inc, Brooklyn Navy Yard Cogeneration Plant. These people are poisoning our air and water. Just a reminder of how bad pollution in Brooklyn can be, let me remind you of what the Gowanus Canal looks like: (two out of five lovely pictures of the canal taken by my wife July 26th, 2008)

See the lovely phase change between the solid slick and the water? Here's what it looked like on the opposite bank:

Yes...that is a glass bottle embedded and suspended by the muck.
alternative energy | Energy | Environment | Health | Pollution | Brooklyn | Con-Ed
Your Health: Antibiotic Resistant Bacteria on the Rise
According to the Union of Concerned Scientists recent newsletter, the antibiotic resistant strain of Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) that has been an increasing problem in hospitals around the world is now infecting apparently healthy schoolkids outside of hospitals. This is a major development. Up until now anti-biotic resistance was only occasionally a problem outside of hospitals (so-called community-acquired" cases). This may be changing. According to the Centers for Disease Control, MRSA was responsible for almost 19,000 US deaths in 2005.
Another part of this development is also important. Evidence from Europe indicate that the community-acquired cases of MRSA are often associated with livestock operations. This is yet further evidence that the idiotic practice of pouring massive amounts of antibiotics into the feed of healthy animals is contributing to the public health risk of antibiotic resistant bacteria that treatens our children and people with a compromised immune system.
antibiotics | Food | Health | Preservation of Antibiotics for Medical Treatment Act | Anthony Weiner | Chuck Schumer | Hillary Clinton | Kirsten Gillibrand | Nydia Velazquez | Yvette Clarke
New York's Teens Need Proper Sex Education
We only have a couple of weeks left in this legislative session and rather than attempting to impress voters with a long record of accomplishment, the strategy of the Senate leadership seems to be to avoid doing much of anything. That said, it is an Albany tradition to always seem to save most of the legislative work – for better or for worse – for the last few days, so I haven't completely given up hope that we can still get some important legislation passed.
Before the session began, I outlined a number of key priorities – issues that I hoped the pressure of a hotly contested election season might prompt action on – one of which was the Healthy Teens Act (S1342). This year the bill passed the Assembly on March 17 by a vote of 130 to 14, and passed the Senate Health Committee May 20 by a vote of 13-4. This is the farthest the Healthy Teens Act has ever come in the legislative process.
Education | Health | Sex
The Healthy Teens Act (S.1342)
My State Senator has been pushing for this one for some time. Needless to say, the Republicans of the State Senate are the problem when it comes to funding comprehensive sex ed programs in New York State. You know Republicans...they believe in the failed abstinence only program.
From NARAL via email:
New studies show that one in four teenage girls has a sexually transmitted infection (STI). In New York, 40,000 teens will become pregnant this year.
Our young New Yorkers deserve better.
New York currently has no designated funding for comprehensive sex education in our schools, although New York’s rates of unintended teen pregnancy and STIs are among the highest in the country. We need to give our teens age-appropriate and accurate sex-ed so that they can make healthy decisions for themselves.
The Healthy Teens Act (S.1342) can make this happen.
If this bill is passed, school districts, BOCES, school-based health centers and community-based organizations would be able to apply for grants to create and implement programs that will give New York students real sex ed.
choice | Health | sexually transmitted disease | NARAL | Velmanette Montgomery
Health Action Alert: Help Keep Antibiotics Effective
An ongoing effort of mine is to fight the misuse of antibiotics. Misuse of antibiotics has been an increasing health hazard for people, leading to many strains of antibiotic resistant bacteria that infect, and sometimes kill, people, particularly children, the elderly and the immunocompromised. Last time I wrote about this I was able to report a victory in the fight to keep antibiotics effective. Today I want to introduce the latest fight.
First, for those who want more background, the Union of Concerned Scientists has an excellent rundown. An excerpt from their site:
antibiotics | Health | Schering-Plough | science
3rd Annual Conference on the Health of the African Diaspora: Mental Health
3rd Annual Conference on the Health of the African Diaspora: Mental Health
Saturday, February, 9, 2008
9:00Am to 6:00PM
NYU Medical Center
550 First Avenue
New York, NY 10016
To Register: http://www.med.nyu.edu/ichr/chad/events/events.html
Conference Fee: $50 General, $20 Students
event | Health | science | New York University
A Step In The Struggle For S-CHIP Veto Over-Ride
Several hundred activists gathered at Columbus Circle Thursday night to start the battle to over-ride the veto by President Bush of the expanded State-Children's Health Insurance Program. The rally, one of 250 nationwide, was organized by Moveon.org-Political Action with significant help from SEIU Local 1199 and and Unite-Here. (You can see some photos of the rally here .)
NYS Assembly Health Committee Chair Richard Gottfried told the crowd about how newly insured children he had met had averted life threatening medical problems because of the availability of health care. 1199 Organizer Andy King set the crowd chanting for health care and cheering his promise that the union would work with us until the veto is overturned.
Health | S-CHIP | 1199 | Carolyn Maloney | George Gresham | Moveon.org | Randi Kuhl | Richard Gottfried | Tom Reynolds
Bush Vetoes Child Health Insurance; Moveon Rally Thursday At 6PM
George W. Bush vetoed the State Child Health Insurance Program at 10 AM Wednesday. The Reuters story (via the NY Times) is here and the fuller AP account is here
Moveon.org Political Action will take action with hundreds of rallies across the United States urging a veto over-ride. We will leaflet and ask the 70% of us who favor child health insurance to send Congress a serious wake up call: override this evil veto.
In Manhattan, Moveon Activists will rally on the West Side of Columbus Circle at 6PM Thursday You can sign up by clicking here
For those who want to take action online, Senator Patrick Lahey's Green Mountain PAC is soliciting letters to the editor about the S-CHIP over-ride. Click here.
The AFL-CIO is asking people to write their House members here
Health | George W. Bush | Moveon.org
Is This More Than Anyone Can Stand To Read About Health Insurance? UPDATES
This item from Overheard in New York:
Redhead: I wish I was a pirate.
Brunette: No, you don't. Pirates are dirty. They don't have toothbrushes.
Redhead: Yeah... But they drink so much alcohol that it kills the bacteria in their mouths anyway.
Brunette: Really? Well, they still don't have health insurance...
illustrates, I think, the degree to which health insurance is on the minds of all of us. UPDATES AFTER THE JUMP
Now that The Simpsons have replaced SICKO as movie topic in my house, perhaps it’s possible to try to think through how to put health insurance on front and center on the agenda of Congress. I hope not to understate the difficulty of doing this. Some people, much better informed than I am on the nuts & bolts of health insurance, seem to think that universal single payer is just around the corner. For this view more hopeful than mine, check out this interview in The American Prospect of founders of Physicians For A National Health Program .
Health | HR 676 | Medicare | Michael Moore | Physicans For A National Health Program






