Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Dangerous, Death-Defying Drive!




Squadrons of snowplows barrel down the interstate in their practical half “v” formation. The plow drivers, charged with scraping and treating some of the most heavily traveled roads in the country run on fumes, having been up since long before dawn, trying to keep up with the white precipitation falling from the sky. Again.

While I watch those plows travel southbound, I crawl along in the “unplowed” northbound lanes- yes, probably all of them, since the dividing lines aren’t visible under the brown, churned-up snow. Cars and even trucks fly by me, most drivers wearing their “cloaks of invincibility.” Especially bold are the drivers of SUVs, and I want to shout out to them “Don’t you know that four wheel drive helps you GO, but not STOP!!!”

Another driver cuts into the large space I have left between my car and the one in front of me. Why are Connecticutians so averse to highway gaps? It’s like the habit of my fellow Nutmeg State residents not being able to allow gaps in conversation. Really, “Connecticutians can’t cope with copious cavernous conditions.“

To amuse myself as I creep along I play car-slid-off-the-road Bingo. Oh look! A silver Audi- great! And that green Ford! All I need is – oh- there you go- a red Chevy SUV- BINGO!!!!!!!

People please listen- we all have places to go, people to see, things to do, and miles to go before we sleep….. miles to go before we sleep. Use your brains, not your right foot; leave room on the road, depart early, or accept lateness. Your family will thank you when you get home safely. And so will mine………………

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Her name is Lola- She resembles some pup I know

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Dog saves family, dies in N.B. fire

Global NewsJanuary 19, 2009



RUSAGONIS, N.B. — A family dog helped save the children but died shortly after, following a house fire that destroyed a log home here Sunday morning.
Andrew Ronalds and his two young sons, aged two and five, were in the basement when their dog Lexi started barking. When the man went upstairs to see what was the matter, he found the back of his home on fire.
He told Global News his first thought was: "Oh my God, get downstairs, get the kids, get them out of the house."
The man managed to shuffle his children, in stocking-feet and not wearing winter coats, out of the home. But Lexi didn't make it out.
Fire Chief Jody Price said the man did the right thing by not going back into the house.
"I think that's why today, we have a family that's grieving the loss of a family pet, but not grieving the loss of a family member."
"She was better than a smoke detector," said Ronalds, of the Labrador retriever. "And here's my advice for anybody from this situation: get a dog and love and take care of your dog and your dog will take care of you when you need it."
The cause of the fire, which caused several hundreds of thousands of dollars in damages, was not immediately known. The family has moved in with friends and the community has pitched in with donations.
Rusagonis is 79 kilometres northwest of Saint John.


From Vancouversun.com

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Milford school nurse selected best in state

From Connpost.com
By Noelle FramptonSTAFF WRITER


MILFORD -- A teenage girl cried hysterically down the hall. Another waited outside the office to talk about something personal, while still another received physical therapy in the next room.
A voice came across the walkie-talkie: Two other students were outside, looking quite sick, but without passes.
"Just send them in," said Kathy Scarinzi, a public health nurse who's worked as school nurse at Foran High School since 1999.
Scarinzi, an Orange resident, loves a challenge. That's why she relishes each hectic day she spends at Foran, helping kids with ailments that range from minor cuts and the stomach flu to serious emotional and psychological issues.
And perhaps that's why she's so respected by her peers that she was named Connecticut School Nurse of the Year by the statewide Association of School Nurses.
"This is like the highest honor you can get as a school nurse," she said, beaming. "I was totally shocked."
Since she came to Foran from Pumpkin Delight School, Scarinzi has made it her mission to foster respect and kindness, as well as physical health.
One way she saw to do that was to start a Gay-Straight Alliance in 2002. With a social worker's help, she worked with students as alliance co-founder and is its adviser.
"I think we've done a good job "¦ because everybody's pretty nice to each other," she said, adding that the alliance has grown. "I just love my job. At the end of the day, you feel rewarded."

Students in the Foran alliance also helped Jonathan Law High School across town to start one, too, she said.
With kind blue eyes and a ready smile, Scarinzi is a married mother of three grown children who's been a school nurse in Milford and Orange for roughly two decades. She wears a rainbow pin to signify solidarity with gay students and another that says, "Stop the name-calling."
On her wall is a plaque stating, "You have the right to be yourself" and the waiting area and hallway are covered with posters illustrating issues like suicide, rape, drugs and safe sex.
"There's a lot of complex needs that have to be met," she said. "This [age] is when mental illness starts to rear its ugly head. Everyone is treated equally here. They know that it's a safe place -- you can talk about anything."
Scarinzi has written letters of recommendation for students, mentored younger nurses, taught about self-injurious behavior at Southern Connecticut State University, spoken at a statewide conference and more.
President of the Milford school nurses union and recording secretary for the state association, she has testified to lawmakers about school nursing issues, advocating a certification requirement for school nurses.
"She's the smartest nurse I know," said her mentee, Foran school nurse Lisa Skawinski. "I haven't asked her a question she doesn't know the answer to."
Carla McNamara, the school nurse at Meadowside School, said she nominated Scarinzi for the award after planning to for years.
"I finally just put my foot down," McNamara said. "She deserves this. She goes above and beyond the call of duty. She just does so much, not only for the students at her school but for us, her colleagues. Any little thing that needs to be addressed, she will address it. Her office is a safe haven in the school for anyone."
McNamara said she and others put together a portfolio of glowing letters from former co-workers and supervisors to include with the nomination form.
Scarinzi brought a drug-prevention program to Foran in response to concern about drug use at the school, as well as inmates from York Correctional Institute to share their stories with preventative intent, her colleague said.
She will be honored Wednesday at a recognition ceremony in West Hartford.
At least one person believes Scarinzi deserves an even higher honor. "You are the best nurse of America, not only of Connecticut," a Foran father from Pakistan told her in a thank-you voice mail.

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Griswold nursing home seeks permission to close

By DEBORAH STRASZHEIM
Norwich Bulletin
Posted Jan 13, 2009 @ 11:01 AM
Griswold, Conn. —
A 90-bed nursing home in formerly run by Haven Healthcare, today filed a Letter of Intent with the Connecticut Department of Social Services to close, because of low occupancy and the need for millions in improvements. Griswold Healthcare & Rehabilitation Center, located at 97 Preston Road, is now operated by Genesis HealthCare, which has been running the Jewett City center since last summer.
The center has 78 patients. Center residents and family members have been notified in accordance with state law.“The facility would require renovations estimated at several million dollars to continue in the future to assure compliance with state regulations, and to meet the safety and comfort requirements that residents and families expect,” Richard Blinn, President of Genesis HealthCare’s New England Region, said. Blinn continued, “We believe that the amount of money required to renovate the facility is better spent in these difficult economic times on direct care in other facilities, and that closing Griswold at this time is both appropriate and necessary.”
With the filing of the Letter of Intent, the center will cease admissions, Blinn said. Blinn also said that there is adequate bed capacity in the surrounding communities to assure care for all 78 current residents. The center will not relocate residents until the State approves closing of the facility. However, the center expects residents and families may request relocations to other area nursing homes on their own initiative.

Monday, January 12, 2009

Would-be bride, 107, seeks her first husband

Too afraid to wed when young, Chinese woman fears she's a 'burden' to kin




BEIJING - A 107-year-old Chinese woman who was afraid to marry when she was young has decided to look for her first husband and hopes to find a fellow centenarian so they will have something to talk about, a Chinese paper reported.
Wang Guiying is worried she is becoming a burden to her aging nieces and nephews since breaking her leg when she was 102 and had to stop doing chores like washing her clothes.
"I'm already 107 and I still haven't got married," the Chongqing Commercial Times quoted her saying. "What will happen if I don't hurry up and find a husband?"

Continues at msn.com

Flat Tire

http://lockportslugline.files.wordpress.com/2008/05/flat-tire-770803.jpg

Yesterday I had a flat tire on the interstate.
So I eased my car over to the shoulder of the road, carefully get out of the car and opened the trunk
I took out 2 cardboard men, unfolded them and stood them at the rear of my car facing oncoming traffic.
They looked so lifelike you wouldn't believe it!
They were in trench coats, exposing their nude bodies and private parts to the approaching drivers.

To my surprise, cars started slowing down looking at my lifelike men.
And of course, traffic started backing up.
Everybody was tooting their horns and waving like crazy.

It wasn't long before a state trooper pulled up behind me.
He got out of his car and started walking toward me.
I could tell he was not a happy camper!

'What's going on here?'

'My car has a flat tire', I said calmly.

'Well, what the hell are those obscene cardboard men doing here by the road?'

I couldn't believe that he didn't know.
So I told him, 'Hellooooo, those are my emergency flashers!'

Saturday, January 10, 2009

Computer geeks learn to flirt

Fri Jan 9, 2009 1:24pm EST

BERLIN (Reuters) - Even the most quirky of computer nerds can learn to flirt with finesse thanks to a new "flirting course" being offered to budding IT engineers at Potsdam University south of Berlin.

The 440 students enrolled in the master's degree course will learn how to write flirtatious text messages and emails, impress people at parties and cope with rejection.

Philip von Senftleben, an author and radio presenter who will teach the course, summed up his job as teaching how to "get someone else's heart beating fast while yours stays calm."

The course, which starts next Monday, is part of the social skills section of the IT course and is designed to ease entry into the world of work. Students also learn body language, public-speaking, stress management and presentation skills.

"We want to prepare our students with the social skills needed to succeed both in their private life and their work life," said Hans-Joachim Allgaier, a spokesman for the institute at Potsdam University where the course is being offered.

(Writing by Anna Brooke; Editing by Nick Vinocur) From Reuters.com

Tis the season for potholes

Friday, 09 Jan 2009, 6:15 AM EST
By: Chris Velardi

New Haven (WTNH) - The winter weather has taken its toll on roads in New Haven and other cities and towns in the form of potholes.

The rain and snow, and freezing and thawing cycle can really make a mess of streets. If streets weren't already prime for potholes from the normal wear and tear, construction and maintenance work opens up the road and puts it at risk.

The Town of Ridgefield says on its web site it "usually fixes all known potholes within 24hrs of notice." Ridgefield residents can report potholes by calling the Public Works at 203-431-2748.
New Haven's Pothole Hotline is 203-946-7700. To report a pothole in your town you should contact the local Public Works Department.

There is also a web site for reporting any kind of nuisance issue at seeclickfix.com . The site was created by a team in New Haven, but it allows people anywhere in the U.S. to post issues they see in their community.

From WTNH.com

Friday, January 9, 2009

Is it a Monster? No, just a labrador puppy

Gotta love it! He seems rather familiar for some reason!

Piping Plover Population Increases Along Connecticut Shore

Peter Marteka Nature's Path
January 9, 2009

With all the shoveling of snow, sleet and ice we've done so far this winter, it may be difficult to remember that in the summer, shovels are also used to build sand castles at the beach. And during those trips to the shore, you may have noticed a small, sandy-colored shorebird with a black ring around its neck tippy-toeing along the beach.

According to state Department of Environmental Protection wildlife biologist Julie Victoria, there were a record 102 of those shorebirds, called piping plovers, that hatched and fledged along the Connecticut shoreline last summer. Those are good numbers for a species that was nearly hunted to extinction for its hat-decorating feathers, and now numbers about 2,000 pairs along the entire Atlantic seaboard. Stormy weather during the crucial hatching time in May helped the fledglings reach birdhood, Victoria said.

"Rain was my friend," she said of the rainy weekends that kept the bird's No. 1 enemy, beachgoers, at home. "That was a critical time for chicks. Human disturbance is the biggest issue."

More From Courant.com

Hospital Scrubs are a Germy, Deadly Mess

Bacteria on doctor uniforms can kill you.
By BETSY MCCAUGHEY
You see them everywhere -- nurses, doctors and medical technicians in scrubs or lab coats. They shop in them, take buses and trains in them, go to restaurants in them, and wear them home. What you can't see on these garments are the bacteria that could kill you.Dirty scrubs spread bacteria to patients in the hospital and allow hospital superbugs to escape into public places such as restaurants. Some hospitals now prohibit wearing scrubs outside the building, partly in response to the rapid increase in an infection called "C. diff."
A national hospital survey released last November warns that Clostridium difficile (C. diff) infections are sickening nearly half a million people a year in the U.S., more than six times previous estimates.The problem is that some medical personnel wear the same unlaundered uniforms to work day after day. They start their shift already carrying germs such as C.diff, drug-resistant enterococcus or staphylococcus. Doctors' lab coats are probably the dirtiest.

At the University of Maryland, 65% of medical personnel confess they change their lab coat less than once a week, though they know it's contaminated. Fifteen percent admit they change it less than once a month. Superbugs such as staph can live on these polyester coats for up to 56 days
Do unclean uniforms endanger patients? Absolutely.

Health-care workers habitually touch their own uniforms. Studies confirm that the more bacteria found on surfaces touched often by doctors and nurses, the higher the risk that these bacteria will be carried to the patient and cause infection.Until about 20 years ago, nearly all hospitals laundered scrubs for their staff. A few hospitals are returning to that policy. St. Mary's Health Center in St. Louis, Mo., reduced infections after cesarean births by more than 50% by giving all caregivers hospital-laundered scrubs, as well as requiring them to wear two layers of gloves.
Monroe Hospital in Bloomington, Ind., which has a near-zero rate of hospital-acquired infections, provides laundered scrubs for all staff and prohibits them from wearing scrubs outside the building. Stamford Hospital in Connecticut recently banned wearing scrubs outside the hospital.Across the pond, a British study found that one-third of medical personnel did not launder their uniforms before coming to work. One British surgeon who specializes in hip and knee replacements reduced postoperative infections by two-thirds at her hospital by protecting patients from contaminated uniforms. Before approaching any patient's bed, nurses put on disposable, clear plastic aprons that were pulled off rolls like dry cleaning bags. Each one costs a nickel.

In response to this evidence and public outrage over infections, the cash-strapped British National Health Service is providing nurses with hospital-laundered "smart scrubs." The smart design includes short sleeves, because long sleeves spread germs from patient to patient.
The new British policy will protect patients and prevent superbugs from being carried outside hospitals.
In one study, more than 20% of nurses' uniforms had C. diff on them at the end of a shift. The germ can cause extreme diarrhea, dehydration, inflammation of the colon, and even death.In a hospital, C. diff contaminates virtually every surface. It spreads when traces of an infected person's feces get in another person's mouth. Patients who touch objects in their room and then eat without washing their hands unknowingly swallow the germ.

Many otherwise healthy patients who go into the hospital for elective surgery, such as hip replacement, have contracted C. diff and died.Outside the hospital, C. diff is also difficult to control. It isn't killed by laundry detergents or most cleaners. Researchers at Case Western Reserve and the Cleveland Veterans Administration Medical Center found that even after routine cleaning, 78% of surfaces still had C. diff. Only scrubbing with bleach removed it.

That's not the kind of cleaning restaurants are prepared to do after serving hospital workers.Imagine sliding into a restaurant booth after a nurse has left the germ on the table or seat. You could easily pick it up on your hands and then swallow it with your sandwich. Hospitals should provide workers with clean uniforms and prohibit wearing them in public.Ms. McCaughey, former lieutenant governor of New York state, is a fellow at the Hudson Institute and chair of the Committee to Reduce Infection Deaths.
from wsj.com

Thursday, January 8, 2009

New York Man Demands $1.5M From Estranged Wife for Kidney


Thursday, January 08, 2009
From FoxNews.com

A New York doctor who gave his wife a kidney is suing her for $1.5 million — or the return of the vital organ — after he says she cheated on him with a physical therapist.
More


I am curious to see how this resolves! I understand that it is difficult for a man to get back the diamond engagement ring he gave his wife, let alone a kidney!
-Shaileen




Police foil German children's dash to Africa

"There's Africa! Let's get married!"

BERLIN (Reuters) - Three German children aged five, six and seven who said they were fed up with cold weather at home set off on a voyage to Africa but only got as far as the local train station, police said on Monday.
The boy and the older girl were planning to get married in Africa and brought the girl's five-year-old sister along as a witness. They left their home in the city of Hanover, which they shared with the boy's father and the girls' mother, early on New Year's Day as their parents slept.
"The children wanted to do something really special for the New Year," said police spokesman Holger Jureczko. "They had it all planned out. They had three suitcases, filled with food, swimming costumes, a lilo and even sunglasses."
He said they took a tram to the central station and were about to board a train to the airport when police stopped them.
"They said they wanted to go to Africa 'because it's so nice and warm there'," Jureczko said. The boy had once been to Italy and convinced the girl that Africa would be even warmer, he said.
The police told the trio that it would be difficult to get to Africa without money or tickets and instead gave them a tour of the police station before handing them over to their parents.
(Reporting by Anna Brooke; editing by Sophie Hardach)

© Thomson Reuters 2009 All rights reserved
addImpression("3098091_Share Links");

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Our Economy


Skier Caught Dangling Bare-Bottomed on Lift

Wednesday, January 07, 2009
Associated Press


A skier falls through the Blue Sky Basin Chairlift last Friday after losing his pants.
VAIL, Colo. — The guy who ended up dangling upside down from a ski lift with his bare bottom whistling in the wind probably doesn't want to hear any "ski bum" jokes. Vail Resorts said the 48-year-old man wasn't injured and was rescued after about seven minutes. His name hasn't been released.
Resort officials have said only that the man was trying to get on the Blue Ski Basin lift on New Year's Day. They haven't said what went wrong.
Resort workers stopped the lift, backed it up about 10 or 12 feet and rescued the man.
Bystanders snapped photos and posted them the Internet, showing a man who looks to be hanging by one ski boot, his ski pants and underwear apparently snagged in the chair and reaching no farther than his knees.
Vail spokeswoman Liz Biebl confirmed the photos on one site were in fact the victim.

From FoxNews.comhttp://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,477385,00.html

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Woman Sues NYC Transit Over Giant Dog-What do you think?

After transit officers wrote 65-year-old Estelle Stamm a ticket in 2007 for bringing her "pony-sized" service dog into a subway station, she successfully sued the city for $10,000. But why stop there? She's also suing NYC Transit for $10 million in a federal lawsuit that accuses workers of violating her civil rights by trying to force her and her giant dog from the transit system.
Stamm insists she has a right to bring her dog on the train and bus because she suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder brought on by a childhood history of sexual abuse. Transit lawyers are arguing that Stamm isn't really disabled, and according to the Daily News they've assembled 8,000 pages of Stamm's Internet postings, in which she brags that her dog's breed—livestock guardian dog—is dangerous. This reportedly includes assertions that her dog has "tremendous killing power" and could be aggressive toward elderly cancer patients because "she can smell death, and she doesn't want it near her."
The ongoing lawsuit was sparked by an incident in 2000 when a bus driver refused to proceed with Stamm's dog on board, and told the other passengers they had Stamm to thank for the delay. She claims one passenger then warned her, "If I'm late for work, I'll find you and kill your... ass!" Stamm, who carries an ID card for the dog issued by NYC Transit, says she's continually questioned by transit employees about her disability, which she says is prohibited by transit regulations.
She's now awaiting a ruling from a federal judge on whether to toss the suit, and tells the Daily News, "These sons of bitches don't like to be told what to do." Of course, Stamm isn't the only one forced to fight for her right to bear dogs; in March a High School principal in Westbury barred a deaf student who tried to bring his Labrador Retriever with him to class.

From gothamist.com

Friday, January 2, 2009

January

"January is here, with eyes that keenly glow,
A frost-mailed warrior
striding a shadowy steed of snow."
- Edgar Fawcett

EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY FOR F/T RNs!


As Connecticut's premier Home Health Care Agency with over 1,000 employees throughout all areas of the state, opportunities abound for
F/T Medical and Behavioral RNs
in the Greater New Haven Area!
Excellent Salary, Hourly and Per Diem Rates
Shift and Weekend Differentials
Paid Orientation and In-Services
Medical, Dental, Life and Disability Insurance
401(k) with Employer Match
Direct Deposit
Employee Credit Union
Payroll Deducted 529 College Savings Plans
Cohesive Team
Call New England Home Care at 203-874-6667 today to learn more!
Join a dynamic, patient-centered team!