The News Review:
- Keep an open mind on national health care
- Health Minute: Embarassed Eaters
- Morton Plant gets K for child/adolescent psych services
- Health officials: It’s not too late for flu shots this season!
Keep an open mind on national health care
Philadelphia Inquirer PA
Many will try to scare the public into believing that more government will mean less freedom. bviously compromises will be made; in Britain there is constant controversy over the government’s refusal to pay for extremely expensive drugs with limited effectiveness. But every child in England is covered unlike nearly nine million American kids. In the end a health-care program that is not profit-driven creates more choices than it eliminates. In Britain you can quit your job and go back to school without worrying about accidents and illnesses. You can even write that novel. You can also stay home with your young children.
Health Minute: Embarassed Eaters
WDEF News 12 TN
News | Health Minute. In today's Health Minute Judy Fortin looks at a condition called "shy eating. "THERE'S N PLACE T HIDE IN A BUSY SCHL LUNCHRM AND THAT'S A PRBLEM FR THSE WH SUFFER FRM A CNDITIN CALLED "SHY EATING. "Typically what is going on there is that they are extraordinarily self-conscious about their weight and they fear that other people will be disgusted by watching them eat so they are embarrassed to do it. CLINICAL PSYCHLGIST MARK CRAWFRD BELIEVES SHY EATING CULD BE THE BEGINNING F A SERIUS EATING DISRDER SUCH AS ANREXIA R BULIMIA. If a child constantly refuses or avoids eating in public especially at times when you know that they are either hungry or it's meal time then that can be a arning sign.
Morton Plant gets K for child/adolescent psych services
Bizjournals.com NC
The settlement is part of a compromise that will increase overall inpatient behavioral health care in Pasco County a fast-growing county that has a. As part of the settlement Morton Plant dropped its challenge to a proposal by Ten Broeck Tampa Inc.
Health officials: It’s not too late for flu shots this season!
Brookings Register SD
“It’s not too late” said South Dakota Department of Health State Epidemiologist Lon Kightlinger. “You should have gotten it back in the end of ctober. But if you couldn’t get it back then just go in and get it now. ” While people of all ages are encouraged to get the shots health officials are taking aim at preventing the illness from hitting the younger generation. The state provides shots for free to children ages 6 months to 18 years old as part of a statewide program aimed at preventing influenza.
Related from Birminghamspoint: Three arrested after Birmingham officer fires shots