Tag Archive for health

Are Household Cleaners Making Your Kids Fat?

Come on, you’re kidding, right? Not according to Canadian researchers who studied the effects of household cleaners on children as young as 3-4 months. Granted, other scientists think the study is flawed. However, it’s something for parents to think about and maybe not take a chance with their little ones’ health.

Read the article Are Household Cleaners Making Your Kids Fat? and decide for yourself.

[Thanks to Tina Blease for this article.]

Toxic Flame Retardants in Your Bed

Looking for furniture, mattress, or children’s items that do not contain toxic flame-retardant chemicals but are fire-resistant?  Go to http://greensciencepolicy.org/topics/consumer   Chemical flame retardants do a good job but are harmful to your health and the health of the Earth. So why not give these others a try?

[For more easy, money-saving, Earth-friendly tips, download a FREE copy of Green Riches: Help the Earth & Your Budget. Go to www.Smashwords.com/books/view/7000 or your favorite e-book seller and download to your computer or e-book device. Totally free, with no strings attached.]

They Don’t Deserve Teeth

If you’ve ever had your insurance company deny paying for a procedure because it wasn’t “a medical necessity,” read this article. Apparently, Texas doesn’t understand that having no teeth is more than a chewing issue; it affects a person’s total health. Not that it matters because, after all, prisoners don’t deserve teeth.

Texas prisons often deny dentures to inmates with no teeth

An Idea: Do You See the Light Bulb Over Your Head?

Did you stock up on those old light bulbs and are still using them?  Think about this: Replacing a single (yes, one) light bulb with fluorescent, which lasts almost 10 times longer, can save ¼ ton of coal, not to mention all the sulfur dioxide, other pollutants, and acid rain that coal would have caused the Earth and us to have breathing and other health problems.

[For more easy, money-saving, Earth-friendly tips, download a FREE copy of Green Riches: Help the Earth & Your Budget. Go to www.Smashwords.com/books/view/7000 or your favorite e-book seller and download to your computer or e-book device. Totally free, with no strings attached.]

AT&T Takes Money, Fires People

[From Support the Fight for Good Jobs at AT&T]

AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson made a promise to invest in his workforce and create at least 7,000 jobs if the tax bill passed.

Well, the bill did pass, and AT&T received a $20 billion windfall. But instead of creating jobs, AT&T has laid off over a thousand workers across the country in the past few months. And the company keeps sending work to low-wage and overseas contractors, devastating families and communities across America.

AT&T workers are fighting back. CWA members at AT&T Midwest and AT&T’s national Legacy T division are fighting for fair union contracts and have voted to strike if necessary to secure a deal that guarantees good jobs, affordable healthcare, and a secure retirement.

Send AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson this message : “I support good jobs and a fair union contract for working people at AT&T.” Sign the petition HERE.

Laundry and Unhealthy Families

Love your babies? The keep them away from fabric softener.

 

Note VOCs are Volatile Organic Compounds. They pollute our indoor air and cause health problems.

(This Sensible Saturday hint thanks to Tina Silva Blease.)

 

 

[For more easy, money-saving, Earth-friendly tips, download a FREE copy of Green Riches: Help the Earth & Your Budget. Go to www.Smashwords.com/books/view/7000 or your favorite e-book seller and download to your computer or e-book device. Totally free, with no strings attached.]

Ugly Contest?

I hate the annual World’s Ugliest Dog contest. I know it started as a parody of pure-breed dog shows. Still, it spotlights dogs who are deformed or have health issues. I’m probably over-sensitive, since I’m a person with a disability. It just seems mean, and if it’s okay to make fun of such animals, why not of humans, too?

BUT, my practical side has to look at the good this contest does. It points  out the problem of puppy mills, with in-breeding that can harm a whole breed.  Take Zsa Zsa, for example.  She won the 2018 contest with her over sized, dangling, slobbery tongue and protruding under bite. (She just died, a month after winning the contest, at age 9–a normal age for her breed.) English bulldogs like her are so inbred in puppy mills that her breed may never recover from the resulting health problems. Such puppies are born, raised in poor condition, and killed if they aren’t sold.  Luckily, Zsa Zsa was rescued from the puppy mill and then adopted–she was one of the lucky ones.

So, this contest promotes adoption of and advocacy for all dogs. As a dog-lover, I need to get over my discomfort and aplaud the good this contest does.

RIP Zsa Zsa.

 

Heads Up–Be Aware!

Events of this week–and of many other previous weeks with similar events–make it imperative that all of us stay alert for signs of mental illness and report them when we see them.  Tell the person’s family, physician, clergy person, teacher, principal, police…anyone in a position to intervene before it’s too late.  Think of it this way: there are likely others who, like you, have noticed the signs but questioned your own judgment and so did nothing.  We learn after, for example, each school shooting that people had noticed.  What if they had said something?

The following is directly from Warning Signs of Mental Illness, an article by the American Psychiatric Association.

 

Signs & Symptoms

If several of the following are occurring, it may useful to follow up with a mental health professional.

  • Withdrawal — Recent social withdrawal and loss of interest in others
  • Drop in functioning — An unusual drop in functioning, at school, work or social activities, such as quitting sports, failing in school or difficulty performing familiar tasks
  • Problems thinking — Problems with concentration, memory or logical thought and speech that are hard to explain
  • Increased sensitivity — Heightened sensitivity to sights, sounds, smells or touch; avoidance of over-stimulating situations
  • Apathy — Loss of initiative or desire to participate in any activity
  • Feeling disconnected — A vague feeling of being disconnected from oneself or one’s surroundings; a sense of unreality
  • Illogical thinking — Unusual or exaggerated beliefs about personal powers to understand meanings or influence events; illogical or “magical” thinking typical of childhood in an adult
  • Nervousness — Fear or suspiciousness of others or a strong nervous feeling
  • Unusual behavior – Odd, uncharacteristic, peculiar behavior
  • Sleep or appetite changes — Dramatic sleep and appetite changes or decline in personal care
  • Mood changes — Rapid or dramatic shifts in feelings

One or two of these symptoms alone can’t predict a mental illness. But if a person is experiencing several at one time and the symptoms are causing serious problems in the ability to study, work or relate to others, he/she should be seen by a mental health professional. People with suicidal thoughts or intent, or thoughts of harming others, need immediate attention.

The Cat’s Meowwww

Treat your cat to home-grown catnip or organic grass. It’s healthier for Tiger and saves you enough money to buy him a toy mouse made out of recycled material.

[For more easy, money-saving, Earth-friendly tips, download a FREE copy of Green Riches: Help the Earth & Your Budget. Go to www.Smashwords.com/books/view/7000 or your favorite e-book seller and download to your computer or e-book device. Totally free, with no strings attached.]

Health Alert!

Keep the flu out of your home. Not worried? You should be.  The CDC says that all states except Hawaii are suffering widespread flu, and the season will continue for at least a couple more months.

This morning, Morning Express on HLN (Headline News) had an expert who offered specific measures we can take BEFORE the flu invades our homes and families.  They’re worth repeating here. (Parentheses are my additions.)

  • Everyone should wash hands often (use any soap and scrub for 30 seconds–temperature of water doesn’t matter).
  • Clean hard surfaces, including all handles (and doorknobs) with an anti-viral cleaning agent (commercial, or, to be eco-friendly, hot water and vinegar or Simple Green).
  • Dry hands on paper towels instead of on a community towel. (Minimize the harm to the ecology by buying paper towels made of recycled materials).
  • Clean toys, hand-held games, remotes–any solid thing the family touches.  (Use that anti-viral cleaning agent.)
  • Use a humidifier.  Flu germs hate warm, humidified air.
  • Gargle green tea.

My main chore today is to flu-proof my home.  Please do the same, dear readers.

Be well.