Category: DAILY DISH


The Daily Wrap

Today on the Dish, Feisal Rauf urged peace; and Leon Wieseltier closed the books on the Mosque with the most beautiful response yet. We parsed Petraeus's comments on Koran-burning; and honoring 9/11 got pretty pricey with Palin and Beck.

The Iraq war via Wikipedia was bound; Castro had lunch with Goldberg; and Pakistan's problems weren't going anywhere. Andrew promised a response on the Iran-Israel article soon; Greece might default on its debts; and we argued over isolationism.

Boulder was burning, America faced fiscal collapse; and the housing hangover was just beginning, but peak oil didn't scare Reihan. Andrew warmed to redistribution rather than soaking the rich and Manzi outlined the hard work ahead on education and immigration. We assessed the GOP's anti-debt rhetoric and the budget behind Obama's proposal; and Conor kept at the Heritage Foundation over Addington. American novelists were in decline according to Time; Santorum had a Google problem; and emergency rooms didn't always fit our schedule.

Karl Smith wrote a pessimist's manifesto; the Chesterton fetish was called into question; and "jumping the shark" may mark the "end of the beginning rather than the beginning of the end." Humanity thrived while the earth died; erotic capital still ruled the beauty premium; and magic mushrooms could help the terminally ill. We watched Tom Hardy work out; and we wanted the sex ads back on Craigslist. Quote for the day here; VFYW here; MHB here; FOTD here; and email of the day here.

Joaquin Phoenix was a mountain-top-water-drop and this woman sacrificed sex for the occasional sherry.

–Z.P.





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In Memoriam

Pat1

Patrick May, September 2 1964 – September 8, 1995.

His ex-boyfriend texted me today with words that at first meant nothing: fifteen years. And then it dawned on me what anniversary this is. The day went by, blogging, emailing, grabbing some eggs for breakfast, walking the dogs, playing with my iPad, checking in with Aaron, a visit from a friend … and then this afternoon, for no apparent reason, I glanced out the window and something just snapped and I found myself sobbing so hard I had to lean against the wall to hold myself up. It was like a vomit. And my body wouldn't stop convulsing for ten minutes as I grabbed the phone to find my friend, the one who was there, the one who still knew and still felt, the one who is still there.

Is this still grief? Does it lie buried all along? When you think it's over, when you've paid your respects, written a book to remember him, and "moved on", and survived, and thrived, and found love and even marriage, does it come back again suddenly like this? Even worse? Like that proverbial truck we always joked could always run you over one day, just as AIDS ran over so many lives and hearts and still does for so many?

I think we are in rats' alley
Where the dead men lost their bones.

'What is that noise?'
        The wind under the door.
'What is that noise now? What is the wind doing?'

                    Nothing again nothing.
                                        'Do
'You know nothing? Do you see nothing? Do you remember
'Nothing?'
I remember

Those are pearls that were his eyes.





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"A Blunder Of Historic Proportions”?

Joe Romm attacks Obama for prioritizing healthcare reform over climate change. E.D. Kain defends the president:

While certainly there is work to be done on the climate change front,
the potential side effects of global warming are still a ways down the
road, while the side effects of being uninsured are immediate.
Similarly, the costs of future global warming are hard to predict,
while the costs of not reforming our healthcare system are relatively
easy to predict. In other words, climate change is something we are
still on some levels unsure about – we know it’s happening, we know
we’re contributing to it, but we don’t know exactly what will happen in
the end and for most Americans, it’s still a fairly vague, abstract
fear in any case. If you get really sick and don’t have insurance –
that’s immediate. If you can’t get health insurance because you have
health problems or you’re too old (but not old enough for Medicare),
that’s a problem for the here and now. That’s a problem you can sink
your teeth into. If you have a large carbon footprint, well, you’re
probably not doing too bad.

Ezra Klein thinks Obama would have done climate change first if he had the votes.





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Pakistan, Still Underwater

PakistaniGirlGettyImages

Simon Roughneen reports from Sindh, Pakistan:

Authorities
have … struggled to cope with a growing number of cases of severe diarrhea
and malaria caused by dirty water that offers a perfect breeding ground for
insects and disease. More than 500,000 cases of acute diarrhea and nearly
95,000 cases of suspected malaria have been treated since the floods first hit,
the U.N.'s World Health Organization said Tuesday.

The big
fear is a cholera outbreak, given that little or no capacity is in place to
deal with what could be a devastating epidemic. Cases have been reported in
Sindh province in recent days, but the Pakistani Government has not yet officially
announced anything. Cholera can kill within 48 hours if not treated, and is
highly contagious. Once identified it can be treated quickly, usually with
basic rehydration treatments.

(Image: A Pakistani girl sits on an evacuation boat as navy officials rescue flood survivor from Dadu district's Gozo on September 8, 2010. By Asif Hassan/AFP/Getty Images.)





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Why Emergency Rooms Are Packed, Ctd

AfterHours

Chart via Ezra Klein. A reader writes:

I come from a medical family (father is a GP and head of a consortium of family practices in New York, oldest sister works for him as a physicians assistant), so maybe I can add a little to Mr. Klein's analysis.  I agree with him that the disparity between an everyday person's schedule and that of primary care doctors office hours is a major issue often forgotten in the great health debate.  However, I believe that the health care industry is beginning to address this problem through the use of urgicare centers.

While I'm fuzzy on all the contractual details of urgicenters, the basic premise is that these clinics are open in the late hours – usually 5-11pm – and provide basic primary care assessment and treatment.  Typically, the doctor will only see you for one ailment to ensure a higher number visits, so hypochondriacs need not apply.  But for the typical bumps, bruises and aches that are non-emergency related, this would be the place to go.

The benefits of urgicare centers are apparent for all three parties involved: hospitals/doctors, insurers and patients.  The average cost of an emergency room visit can go well north of $1000 dollars, so insurance companies view urgicenters as a huge cost saver.  Even if a patient visit at an urgicare clinic is $200 or $300, that is still less than half the cost of an ER visit that insurers are currently shelling out to cover.  Doctors and hospitals also see first-hand the relief that urgicare provides for overcrowded emergency rooms, as non-emergency related ailments can be correctly sourced elsewhere. 

Lastly, patients will benefit in the reduced average wait-time to be seen (although when you are sick, it probably won't feel any shorter in the waiting room).  It's no wonder that many local governments and hospitals are beginning to seriously invest in these clinics, given their seemingly positive cost-benefit trade off. 

Another writes:

My current health plan (provided via my husband’s job) provides access to Urgent Care.  Urgent care does not provide 24 hr service, but has greatly expanded hours compared to my PCP office.  I am an IT consultant, and paid hourly.  Until recently I’ve been a raging workaholic, and taking time off from work to visit a doctor seemed absurd, and impossible to schedule.  When I’m sick (sore throat, sinus infection, etc) I want to see a doctor immediately.  Try scheduling with most PCP doctors and you are faced with an appointment weeks away. 

I always thought Urgent Care was substandard – until one day when I ran out of my prescription medicine for acid reflux.  (The lapse in medicine was not my fault; it was due to yet another retirement of my previous PCP, and I was stuck waiting five months to get an initial appointment with my new PCP – another huge time drain.)  It was a long holiday weekend, and I tried every over the counter medicine I could find.  The pain continued to worsen, so finally I gave in and went to Urgent Care.  The wait was short, the care was great, they gave me prescriptions to hold me over to my visit with the new PCP.  In short, it was a terrific experience as far as health care goes.  I made a decision that day that I would much rather pay the additional $10 in copay than take time off from work, which easily costs me hundreds of dollars.  (I have no idea of the difference in cost to my insurance company.)

Fortunately I have not had any urgent issues since then, but my husband has, and I was happy to drive him there for treatment.  Again, we were both pleased with the treatment, and the availability.  I will use them for all sporadic medical issues, except for a nearly annual physical which is required to keep them writing prescriptions for my chronic conditions.

Another:

There are two large hospital conglomerates here in the St. Louis market, BJC and SSM, and both operate urgent care facilities.  I work with a group of doctors that opened their own urgent care company and presently have three locations, with another one under construction.  It takes time, but people are getting used to the idea that there are alternatives to primary care and hospital emergency care.  The thing I hear most satisfying to patients of an urgent care visit is the minimal wait at the urgent care compared to a hospital.  Emergency room waiting times can be in excess of several hours if your condition is likely not to get worse during the wait.  Urgent care waits rarely exceed 30 minutes.

Another:

There's another alternative: Walk-In Clinics. They're popping up all over my home area just outside Chicago, both in drugstores and in attractive facilities built by local hospitals. Many CVS, Walgreens and Osco stores now have walk-in clinics staffed by Physician Assistants and Nurse Practitioners. They can handle any of the minor health problems that we run into.

Last week, suffering from a bad case of poison ivy, I decided on my lunch hour I needed to see a doctor and get a prescription for steroids. I didn't bother calling my regular doctor – I couldn't have gotten in for a week, at least – so I drove 10 minutes to my usual hospital-run clinic, passing one drugstore clinic and another hospital-run storefront. There were no lines; I waited in a comfortable chair in a large waiting room with flat-screen TVs for less than five minutes to see a doctor. In less than 20 minutes I was on the way out with a prescription.





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