Interesting article I’ve read.
Makes me want to travel. Makes me want to experience new things, roll in the mud, camp, have to catch my own food for today, etc.
…
We board the plane with our own pillows, blankets and inflatable cushions. We bring ear plugs so we don’t hear anything and a sleep mask so we don’t have to see. If you want to bring your own air, you can buy an “ultra-mini air supply” for $129. Also there is a concoction we can spray the surrounding area and the surfaces because we might be contaminated by a virus. Now we are ready to travel to an exotic destination and feel we are in home in bed.
When we arrive at the hotel, we can bring our own bedding for those who are obsessed about who was the person who slept in the bed the night before. Also there is a $79 Nano-UV Disinfection Light to kill bacteria, complete with remote control. I guess that is so we can stand at the door and zap lavatory surfaces, bedding and telephones rather than look at the spectacular view from our windows — which don’t open so we can’t hear or see or smell anything outside.
…
Well, I’ve booked a ticket to Chicago yesterday. Then I’ll be off to New Hampshire. Then I’m not yet sure, but I’m sure I’ll find something good.
LMFAO
This IS my life… Except I don’t have much time for gaming lately

Rhoda, a person from Omaha who posted a reply on my post about webmd and mrsa has a blog.
Read it. http://www.rhoda.mrsastory.com/.
If this is real [and I am a known skeptic], this is some crazy stuff.
This post here talks about crazily insane shit I never consider a possibility:
 I took my daughter to the ER last night or a broken finger and a UTI. While we were checking her in I asked if they needed to be notified if she has MRSA.
“Has what?â€
“MRSA. M-R-S-A.â€
M-R-S-E? I can check her records.â€
“No, Mam. M-R-S-A.â€
She checks her computer and finds there is no previous note of it although we have been there before so she scribbles it on a piece of paper for us to give the admitting nurse which we dutifully did. She glanced at it and went on with getting us registered and proceeded to put us in a double room with another patient. Then when they came in to examine and work on my daughter not one of them thought or bothered to even put on gloves or wash their hands before leaving the room. I wonder if they ever did before going on to other patients.
Why didn’t I make a fuss at the time instead of calling to file a complaint today? I suppose it is because my daughter was in their hands and I hate to piss off the people who are going to make her feel better and it definitely seems to piss off medical professionals to correct them. It was 3 a.m. and I wanted to get out of there some time before day light. Whatever, I see it as unconscionable in that daylight. I should have yelled loudly to save the lady in the next bed and the patients seen after my doctor and nursed left with MRSA on their hands. Of course, I have found their attitude here in Omaha to be pretty much, Oh, we are all carriers any how!!! Which is another reason I didn’t speak up. Still wrong. I still should have. I have to be stronger than the opposition in this war even if it means staying up all night and going from hospital to hospital. I should use every opportunity to spread the word instead of the disease no matter how late at night or how mean everyone might be about being corrected. I will do better!!!! See you!
Is this possible?
Things like this exist? I mean most hospitals are Tenet-owned… I’ve seen what they do… But I never thought Rhoda’s story possible. Is it? Ooof…
I mean I knew this, but here are the numbers.
And the bottom line? In a study of 1.69 million admitted patients in 77 hospitals, the COST TO THE HOSPITALS was $286 million — meaning MORE THAN $5000 PER PATIENT.
That’s what it cost the hospital! That came out of the bottom line! That’s not what it cost the patient, and it’s not what it cost to treat the patient. That’s only what it cost the hospital — in dollars. There is also (what they call) an opportunity cost. I remember this one from Economics 101 in college — “opportunity cost = opportunity lost†— and the opportunity lost to hospitals is 7.5 million patient-days nation wide. That means that there would be room for that many more patients in hospitals if the others didn’t acquire infections and have to stay so long.
The original article lists a lot of valuable links, as well. This is a definite must-read and an interesting one at that, too. Well-written.
Also, read this report the article links to. Quite educational: “Dispelling the Myths: The True Cost of Heal thcare-Associated Infect ions” (PDF).
I was reading another post on this blog, but decided to click “about”. This is very interesting. Most interesting, really. This is a story of a 52-year-old woman who has beed misdiagnosed numerous times with a cancer when she had none.
Afterall, had I undergone chemo, and survived, they would have told me I had been cured of a disease I never had.
Funny and true. Had she opted for the treatment, she would have been fine after it and they would have charged her and told her that it was the treatment… Not really funny… No, not really funny at all!
Read the story and see for yourself. Out of everything I had posted today, I think this is the best one. Well, take that with a grain of salt… I *do* most prefer non-fiction.
The first was commissioned by the Department of Health and produced by the specially convened vCJD Clinical Governance Advisory Group (CGAG). Chaired by Sir William Stewart, it proposes the creation of patient-focused clinical governance arrangements to standardise the care that patients at risk of vCJD receive across the country. It recommends that GPs should take the lead in commissioning care for them, supported by consultant neurologists and specialist centres such as the National CJD Surveillance Unit and the National Prion Clinic.
MediaNewswire.com noted the publication of “Two new reports on vCJD ( variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease)”.
Oi oi
5. The report refers to the following as “people at risk”:
- Recipients of blood components donated by people who later developed vCJD.
- Recipients of certain plasma products ( clotting factors ).
- Blood donors to patients who later developed vCJD.
Blood donors infected with this will give it to the respective recipients. Nice.
1. Both reports can be found on-line at http://www.dh.gov.uk
2. Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease ( CJD ) is one of a group of diseases called Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathies. All of these diseases can have a very long incubation period, cause severe and irreversible damage to the central nervous system. There are so far no proven effective treatments.
Oh, great, tell me more. All that AND no cure?
Reading all this scary stuff makes me reconsider sitting here in the park on a bench…. Probably not sterile…. 
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