Wealthy L.A. Schools’ Vaccination Rates Are as Low as South Sudan’s – The Atlantic

Wealthy L.A. Schools’ Vaccination Rates Are as Low as South Sudan’s – The Atlantic.

When actors play doctors on TV, that does not make them actual doctors. And that does not mean they should scour some Internet boards, confront their pediatricians, and demand fewer vaccinations for their children, as some Hollywood parents in Los Angeles have apparently been doing.

The Hollywood Reporter has a great investigation for which it sought the vaccination records of elementary schools all over Los Angeles County. They found that vaccination rates in elite neighborhoods like Santa Monica and Beverly Hills have tanked, and the incidence of whooping cough there has skyrocketed.

I guess these “enlightened” parents know little about community immunity.

You can’t fix stupid.

Community Immunity “Herd” Immunity.

Centipedes, Caterpillars, and Other Creepy Crawlers | EBM Gone Wild

Centipedes, Caterpillars, and Other Creepy Crawlers | EBM Gone Wild.

Governor declares emergency after drug overdoses – New Hampshire news – Boston.com.

The more I learn about Emergency Medicine the more I understand how much data EM physicians have to know about what can kill you so that they can save your life.  Saturday mornings are my time to catch up on medical news.  The overdose epidemic in NH was interesting but not completely surprising.  The bug information was surprising to me.

I’m not going to Peru.  Go to the website for a very good downloadable Slideshare presentation.  Great pictures too.

 

The Financial Risk of Living a Long Time

The Financial Risk of Living a Long Time

People nearing the end of their careers can potentially lose 5% to 10% of their retirement wealth, or the equivalent of 2 to 5 years’ labor, by failing to annuitize their savings or annuitizing too early, according to an estimate by Alessandro Previtero of Ivey Business School in Canada. By providing a guaranteed income for life, an annuity is essentially an insurance policy against outliving one’s retirement savings. In a study, Previtero found that when stocks are rising, people are less likely to purchase annuities offered by their employers.

 

This excerpt came through my RSS reader this morning.  As an insurance guy, naturally I was interested.  When I clicked on the link to take me to the original Harvard Business Review blog article I got a 404.  So I went to Google and found the article linked below.

CEG_AnnuitiesDeserveAttention

No, I will not speculate on the reasons why HBR took their post down.  Read the article and let your imagination roam.

Wrist blood pressure monitors: Are they accurate? – Mayo Clinic

Wrist blood pressure monitors: Are they accurate? – Mayo Clinic.

That can’t be right.

I had my blood pressure taken at the dentist the other day.  The reading nearly sent me into cardiac arrest.  My observations:

  • The equipment used was a wrist BP monitor, not exactly known for accuracy.
  • The individual who took the reading is a dental hygienist who probably got zero training in the proper positioning and use of the monitor.
  • My blood pressure has always been normal.

I’ll stop at one of those ubiquitous upper arm machines you find at any pharmacy and do a recheck.  And those iPhone apps that measure blood pressure?  Don’t even bother.

 

It’s Official: The Boomerang Kids Won’t Leave – NYTimes.com

It’s Official: The Boomerang Kids Won’t Leave – NYTimes.com.

One in five people in their 20s and early 30s is currently living with his or her parents. And 60 percent of all young adults receive financial support from them. That’s a significant increase from a generation ago, when only one in 10 young adults moved back home and few received financial support. The common explanation for the shift is that people born in the late 1980s and early 1990s came of age amid several unfortunate and overlapping economic trends. Those who graduated college as the housing market and financial system were imploding faced the highest debt burden of any graduating class in history. Nearly 45 percent of 25-year-olds, for instance, have outstanding loans, with an average debt above $20,000. (Kasinecz still has about $60,000 to go.) And more than half of recent college graduates are unemployed or underemployed, meaning they make substandard wages in jobs that don’t require a college degree. According to Lisa B. Kahn, an economist at Yale University, the negative impact of graduating into a recession never fully disappears. Even 20 years later, the people who graduated into the recession of the early ’80s were making substantially less money than people lucky enough to have graduated a few years afterward, when the economy was booming.

Read the entire article for a lesson in how to put a positive spin on our new Culture of Dependency.  Watch the slideshow of a dose of reality.  Then read the reader comments and decide for yourself if this “new and permanent life stage” is truly a “potentially thrilling economic evolution”.

Or not.

Even The Price of Beer Is Rigged

Beer is big business in Germany. In terms of global beer production in 2012 (the 2013 rankings haven’t come out yet), Germany ranked in fifth place with 94.6 million hectoliters. OK, fifth place is lousy for a country that prides itself in its beer culture – but hey, there aren’t that many people in Germany. The four leading countries all have much larger populations: China (490.2 million hectoliters), the US (229.3 million hectoliters), Brazil (132.8 million hectoliters), and Russia (97.4 million hectoliters).

via Testosterone Pit – Home – Turns Out, Even The Price of Beer Is Rigged.