hknapp | Shared With: Everyone - Jan 31 2008 | food, health
Ugh! I'm canceling my Super Bowl party. Oh wait...I'm not having a Super Bowl party. Whew.
Quoted: A scientific report, inspired by an episode of “Seinfeld,” may cause football fans to take a second look at that communal bowl of dip. On average, the students found that three to six double dips transferred about 10,000 bacteria from the eater’s mouth to the remaining dip.
hknapp | Shared With: Everyone - Jan 24 2008 | health, britney spears
Amen. Putting aside the fact that the nation's Britney mania is annoying at best, the coverage of her mental health is horribly irresponsible (and tacky).
Quoted: It's one thing, she notes, to discuss what concerns a doctor might have when a young woman has two toddlers, is going through a divorce and is suspected of substance abuse. It's another thing, she says, to speculate she has something specific like bipolar disorder. After all, Saltz says, a diagnosis of bipolar disorder is a very complicated one -- one that takes knowledge and context, a lot of questions and a lot of patient history. "It's not like a blood test," she says. "Brains don't have a check box."
hknapp | Shared With: Everyone - Oct 08 2007 | law, science, health
hknapp | Shared With: Everyone - Oct 08 2007 | ethics, health
hknapp | Shared With: Everyone - May 09 2007 | health, technology, news
hknapp | Shared With: Everyone - Apr 26 2007 | agriculture, food, health
trace your food to its source!
Quoted: Now on the Dole Organic website, consumers can “travel to the origin of each organic product” Dole produces. By entering the three digits Farm Code located in the sticker of their fruit you can visit the country, the farm, view photos and learn more about our products and our people.
hknapp | Shared With: Everyone - Apr 20 2007 | health, news, insurance
Well...whatever it takes.
Quoted: The C.E.O.’s rallying to universal coverage now — particularly in the last few months — are acting not so much out of social solidarity as out of financial necessity, as the burden of financing workers’ premiums has become ever more onerous. “The refrain from business was, ‘We can’t afford to do universal health care,’ ” says Wyden, whose plan calls for shifting responsibility for buying insurance from employers to individuals. “Now the refrain is, ‘We can’t afford not to do it.’ ”
hknapp | Shared With: Everyone - Apr 20 2007 | health, abortion, supreme court
hknapp | Shared With: Everyone - Apr 15 2007 | ethics, health, law
hknapp | Shared With: Everyone - Mar 22 2007 | health, news
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