Imagine you’re having a heart attack. Your co-workers call 911, and the medics arrive. Under lights and sirens, traffic cleaves as the path clears to the hospital where doctors and nurses are waiting to administer lifesaving treatment. Now imagine that instead of going to the ER down the street, the medics are forced to take you to another hospital on the other side of town 20 minutes away. You are clutching your chest and dripping with sweat, but they explain that the nearest hospital is “on diversion” temporarily closed to ambulances because of overcrowding in the ER.

If you’re lucky, those extra 20 minutes won’t make the difference between life and death.

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SUNDAY, July 3 (HealthDay News) — “I had my eye removed on May 29, which was a Sunday.”

That’s the way Patricia Kearns, 62, of Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., began the tale of the 1988 fireworks injury that led to the loss of her right eye.

As she tells it, Kearns and her husband lived in a lovely home along a canal. That evening they were hosting a dinner party for about 100 people, honoring the new president of a local Catholic high school where her husband was on the board.

A string quartet played as people chatted and ate. “It’s not like people were jumping around with lampshades on their heads,” Kearns said. “This was a pretty conservative crowd.”

A pair of 13-year-old boys in a backyard across the canal had taken out some bottle rockets and were firing them at the people left at Kearns’s party.

Kearns didn’t have time to process anything else. “I just remember this wave of pressure on the right side of my face,” she said. “The next thing I knew, I was on the ground and someone was saying, ‘Keep her head up!’”

Emergency workers took her to a local hospital, and the decision was made to transfer her immediately to Bascom Palmer Eye Institute at the University of Miami’s Miller School of Medicine. She arrived by ambulance in the wee hours of the morning.

Kearns’s doctor at the institute told her that they were going to try to save her eye, and that she would undergo surgery that afternoon. She recalls having little hope.

“I knew I was going to lose my eye,” she said. “I just knew. I remember during the initial examination, someone saying, ‘That’s her cornea on her eyelash.’ I thought they’d try to salvage what they could, but it was just gone.”

She woke up after the operation with a pressure bandage on her face. She was told that the damage had been too extensive and that they’d had to remove her eye.

All told, Kearns said, she counts her blessings.

“I’m lucky to be alive, and I’m lucky only one eye was affected,” she said. “I could have been totally blinded.”

But she still misses her right eye.

“There’s a part of me that still says, ‘Why did this happen?’” Kearns said. “But I know why it happened. These kids were unsupervised, and these fireworks are dangerous things.”

A companion article offers information on preventing injuries from fireworks.

The scan was FINE! Phew! Two very happy and active babies. Twin 1 is head down, and twin 2 breech; not that it matters too much at this stage, but it gives me hope for avoiding an ELCS. Twin 1 is the larger of the two, but not by much. We have kept the genders a surprise, just as we did with DS & DD. This irritates some of our family, but we like it that way. My DH would like two boys (of course) and I think if there was a choice, Id have one of each, but Ill be happy whatever we have -as long as theyre okay and I am too. 

Saw the Consultant again a few days later, he did a quick scan, asked the usual questions and that was about it. Not entirely sure what Im supposed to ask him really.

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A new variety of black raspberries that have been grown in Britain is being touted as the new superfood that can help prevent cancer.

Named Mac Black, the variety apparently has a more intense flavour than traditional red varieties.

It is also said to include relatively high levels of compounds, which scientists have identified as beneficial in preventing cancer.

Set to go on sale on Tuesday, Mac Blacks are rich in ellagic acid, anthocyanins and antioxidants, and have been called the ‘king of berries’ for their superior health benefits, reports the Daily Mail.

Studies at Ohio State University have found significant decreases in colon tumours in rats and oesophageal tumours in mice fed a diet with black raspberries.

Studies have shown that extracts of raspberries and blackberries may slow the growth of breast, cervical, colon and oesophageal cancers.

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Here We Go

May 31st. I had my first, self administered injection of Humira, under the guidance of the Healthcare at Home nurse. I was advised to take it out of the fridge about 30 minutes before injecting as this would reduce the stinging. I had read in various blogs and publications that people tolerated it better by injecting in the leg instead of the abdomen as this reduced the likelihood of nausea, though the nurse said she didnt subscribe to that view. However, I decided on the leg. It was an absolute doddle. It did not sting, it did not hurt at all. There was a tiny spot of blood afterwards but that was it. I was told to expect “flu like” symptoms at first and possibly some of the numerous side effects that are listed on the leaflet. Read more…

WEDNESDAY, June 29 (HealthDay News) — Outpatient electronic prescribing systems make the same common mistakes that occur in manual systems, a new study finds.

Researchers examined 3,850 computer-generated prescriptions received by a commercial pharmacy chain in three different U.S. states over a four-week period in 2008. Of those prescriptions, 452 (nearly 12 percent) contained a total of 466 errors, of which about one-third were deemed to be potentially harmful.

Of the 163 errors considered potentially harmful, 58 percent were considered “significant” (including diarrhea, rash, headache), and 42 percent were deemed “serious” (such as, low blood sugar, reduced heart rate and fainting).

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