Individuals who suffer a shoulder injury, only to suffer through the pain and inconvenience of shoulder surgery should not have to bear even more suffering once the surgical repair is made. But they do.
For the uninformed, the shoulder pain pump—like all pain pumps—is a device that makes fast work of delivering pain medication quickly and efficiently to relieve the suffering encountered by a shoulder surgery patient. And make no mistake—shoulder surgery is painful. Little wonder that doctors were looking for ways to deliver pain medication more efficiently than what oral pain meds are capable of. Doctors were also looking for a level of control that giving a patient a bottle filled with potent pain pills did not provide.
The pain pump proved to be the answer: a device that delivered pain medication directly to the wound site through the insertion of a catheter, in a carefully controlled fashion.
Shoulder pain pumps were approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for use in soft tissue surrounding the shoulder. However they are NOT approved for delivering pain medication directly into the shoulder joint. The FDA, in fact rejected that indication when the pain pump manufacturers put it forward.
They didn’t tell the doctors that. Doctors were, in fact led to believe that using pain pumps Read the rest of this entry »
Do I sound alarmist? or more aptly, alarmed? I am. I was writing an article on Asbestos and Asbestos Mesothelioma—and the more I researched the more alarmed I became. If you’re like me, asbestos mesothelioma—while indeed an awful, deadly disease—seemed to be something that only shipyard workers, miners, construction workers and veterans had to fear. Or I associated it with legal ads that start out “Have you or a loved one….” But a little research yields some pretty alarming facts about asbestos—and it’s changed my opinion about who’s really affected by asbestos exposure into “this means YOU”.
A little tooling around the EPA site gave me the following:
The EPA estimates that there are asbestos containing materials in most of the nation’s approximately 107,000 primary and secondary schools and 733,000 public and commercial buildings.
Damaged ACM (asbestos-containing material) is more likely to release fibers than non-damaged ACM. In a 1984 survey, EPA found that approximately 66 percent of those buildings that contained asbestos contained damaged ACM.
With three young kids sitting (right now!) in a school building that was built between 1930 and 1950, when asbestos was widely in use, those two statements above are giving me pause. I understand that asbestos removal is not always the best course of action as it can create a problem where perhaps one did not exist—however, that second statement—the one indicating that approximately 66% of buildings with asbestos contain damaged asbestos—i.e., the kind Read the rest of this entry »
Gaiam Bottles (the BPA-free version we trust) with free shipping…but hurry, offer ends October 31st!
There’s something subliminal about those Gaiam merchandisers touting FREE shipping on what should now be FREE of BPA water bottles, no?
If you haven’t been following the news on Gaiam’s little marketing misstep, read on.
If you have, just thought you’d appreciate the very coincidental ad…which happened to appear in today’s San Jose Mercury News’ online edition.
Lasik surgery’s been around for a while now (since the late 80’s, with the first Lasik laser being approved for use in 1998). And reports indicate some 6,000,000+ have had Lasik. I only know of one person who’s had it done and she raves about it. So much so that I even looked into it myself, but my ophthalmologist rejected me. It was worse than being dumped. So, while I cursed him at the time, the fact that the FDA is now beginning its study of Lasik long-term effects and post-procedure “quality of life” has me feeling a little better.
But it’s also got me thinking…what’s going on? Why now? The FDA doesn’t just casually decide to start snooping around in someone’s backyard…right?
Any time the FDA starts snooping around something (and this time it’s in tandem with their sending out warning letters to 17 Lasik facilities that were not properly reporting problems with Lasik procedures) I raise an eyebrow. Yes, I’m a bit jaded in the line of work I’m in. But you have to wonder why Read the rest of this entry »
Capital One got hit with a potential class action lawsuit this week, and one guess what it’s about? Interest rate hikes on its supposedly low interest rate credit cards.
I would dare to hazard a guess that unless you live in a cave, you have likely seen one of the several Capital One’s ads promoting their low interest cards… you know the “what’s in your wallet?” campaign? Not a lot by the time Capital One is finished with you, from the sounds of things.
The back story is sadly, not unique, but rather the predictable narrative of deceptive business practices which appear to have become the hallmark of big banking.
Capital One, the suit alleges, raised interest rates on many card holders whose accounts were in good standing. Why? Read the rest of this entry »