Sunday, December 22, 2024

Cartoon I for the holidays

 

"I can cure your back problem, but there's a risk
you'll be left with nothing to talk about."

Sunday, December 15, 2024

How’s your mobility?

Mobility is not the same as flexibility. Flexibility is the ability of muscles, ligaments, and tendons to passively stretch. Mobility is the joint's ability to actively move through its full range of motion. Good mobility requires flexibility in the muscles and other soft tissues surrounding the joint, but it also requires strength and stability. You can be flexible but lack mobility.

Recent studies have found a correlation between joint health and longevity; also, that people with lower limb mobility are less likely to suffer from falls in their older years. Here are some tests for checking your mobility:

  • Neck: (1) Rotate your head right and left, without turning your shoulders. You should be able to turn your head 80 degrees, or just short of your shoulder. (2) Look up: you should be able to gaze directly at the ceiling. Bring our chin down toward your chest. It should be an inch or two away at most. (3) Bend your neck sideways to lower your right ear to your right shoulder. Your ear should be about halfway to your shoulder.
  • Shoulders: You should be able to reach your hand behind your back and touch your mid back with your thumb.
  • WristsStarting at chin level, place your hands together with your palms touching and fingers pointed up. Keeping your palms together and elbows out and parallel to the ground, lower your hands down to your belly button.

  • Back: Standing with your feet hip-width apart and keeping your knees straight, slide your fingertip down your thigh. You should be able to touch the outside of your knee. (Do both sides.)
  • Hips: Sitting in a chair or lying on your back, pull your knee (left or right) into your chest. Your thigh should touch your abdomen and chest. (Do both sides.)
  • Knees: Standing on your left foot, place your left hand on a wall or chair for balance if needed. Use your right hand to bring the heel of your right foot behind you, toward your butt. Your heel should touch your butt. Repeat on the other side.
  • Ankles: Facing a wall with your toes touching it, bend your knees and keep your feet flat on the ground. Your knees should be able to touch the wall without your heels rising. If this is easy take one step away from the wall and repeat.

Here’s a link to exercises to improve your mobility. Here's one from an earlier blog of mine for improving your flexibility. Apologies to those who have already seen this information in The New York Times.

For an introduction to this blog, see I Just Say No; for a list of blog topics, click the Topics tab.

Sunday, December 8, 2024

Guaranteed annual income and health

 I am in favor of guaranteed annual income—or universal basic income, or similar proposals. They’re a form of social security in which a population group receives a regular sum of money, either from a government or from some other public institution, independent of any other income. The idea, in the words of the Stanford Basic Income Lab and Center for Guaranteed Income Research, is to “…facilitate individuals' opportunity, freedom, and resilience to build financial security.” In the United States, about 30 pilot programs have been established and evaluated.

A large body of research has shown that people tend to use the money for essentials, such as rent, transportation and food—also for medical care. In one pilot program, 2800 participants received cash benefits via debit card of up to $400 per month for 9 months. As reported in The Journal of the American Medical Association, researchers found that—compared to a control group—the cash benefits significantly reduced emergency room visits. That’s because people spent money on healthcare—including visits to subspecialists—to forestall such visits.

In another pilot program, 3000 participants in Illinois and Texas received $1,000 monthly for three years beginning in 2020—a 40 percent boost in their incomes. At a time when even Americans with insurance say they have trouble staying healthy because they struggle to afford care, the study results show that basic-income recipients increased their spending on health care services, including visits to hospitals and dentists. (Almost two in five insured Americans report delaying or skipping necessary treatment or medication because of high out-of-pocket costs for health care.)

Studies have not proven that the cash transfers have had a lasting impact on the physical health of the recipients (probably too late). Even so, recipients at least have more resources to seek help when they need it.

For an introduction to this blog, see I Just Say No; for a list of blog topics, click the Topics tab.

Sunday, December 1, 2024

Physician burnout and shortages

From what I’ve been reading lately, it appears that doctors are increasingly suffering from burnout. In the opinion of Dr. Eric Reinhart, a physician at Northwestern University, burnout is caused in large part by “…our dwindling faith in the systems for which we work.” Definitions of burnout have included emotional exhaustion in response to intensive work, becoming emotionally drained, detachment from and negative feelings toward people they are trying to help, and a sense of helplessness and loss of purpose.

Nearly two-thirds of physicians report that they are experiencing burnout, and are “finding it difficult to quash the suspicion that our institutions, and much of our work inside them, primarily serve a moneymaking machine.” Examples include hospitals putting profits over people, the use of billing codes that dictate nearly every aspect of medical practice, and the profit motives of insurance and pharmaceutical companies that become intractable barriers to improving patients’ lives. A study of 10,000 family physicians showed that key contributors to burnout also include the need to spend time at home working on electronic health records as well as a lack of a fully staffed support team. 

Now we have a chronic physician shortage. One in five doctors plans to stop practicing in the coming years. In 2021, about 117,000 physicians left the work force, while fewer than 40,000 joined it. According  to projections published by the Association of American Medical Colleges, the United States will face a physician shortage of up to 86,000 physicians by 2036.  

The United States is the only large high-income nation that doesn’t provide universal health care to its citizens. Instead, it maintains a lucrative system of for-profit medicine. Dr. Reinhart supports universal health care. So does The American College of Physicians, which says, in its position paper, that “the United States needs a healthcare system that provides care for everyone, either through a universal health insurance system, such as the UK NHS, or through a pluralistic system that involves the government and private organizations.” So let’s do it!

For an introduction to this blog, see I Just Say No; for a list of blog topics, click the Topics tab.