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June 29, 2006

Lose the training wheels

That's the name of the organization: "Lose the Training Wheels Bicycle Instruction" to be precise. What an awesome day I had, too. Talk about the kind of story I positively love to cover.

This is a really great idea, and the camp will return to Portland next year from June 25th to June 29th, according to co-organizer Ann Donaca-Sullivan. There are already 8 kids who are on the schedule to attend!! They get specialized help from trained adaptive PE experts.. and they get to ride those funky bikes that help them build confidence and learn to balance.

To get in touch with this organization check out this link:

http://www.losethetrainingwheels.org

To learn about the upcoming Portland, OR camp.. you can email the co-organizer Ann at: annds@nwlink.com

Thoughts?? Email me: sstricklen@kgw.com

June 27, 2006

Measles in 10 minutes or less

It's after 4:35pm and I'm just starting this entry.

I hit at 5:07.

When I'm in the a-block ((the first segment of the show before the commerical break)) the producer likes me to be in position by the time the show starts which is actually 4:57.

I will have to type quickly.

Here's what you need to know about measles.

Most of us should have gotten two vaccinations as children. It's worth a check of your records, especially if you live up in Vancouver (like me) and visited any of the places this infected man visited. To make this quick, I'm going to copy/paste a press release issued by Clark County Public Health. This really spells everything with a level of detail I just can't get into in 1 minute.

Measles case prompts public health officials to urge vaccinations for people who might have been exposed

Vancouver, WA-A Clark County man has been diagnosed with probable measles. He recently returned from overseas and reported exposure to a laboratory-confirmed case of measles while abroad. Public health officials are urging people who may have been exposed to review their immunization status and, if necessary, get immunized. "Measles is highly contagious," said Dr. Alan Melnick, Clark County Health Officer. "People who are not already immune to measles are at significant risk if they were in the same room with this man since June 22."

The patient is known to have visited Kaiser Permanente medical offices in Vancouver and Portland on three occasions during the past week. Public health officials are trying to protect people who may have been exposed at these medical offices. People who were at the Kaiser Permanente Salmon Creek facility or the facility at Kaiser Permanente East Interstate during the times listed below should:
· Confirm whether or not they are already immune to measles.
· Receive measles vaccination within 3 days of their exposure.
· If it has been more than 3 days since the time of exposure, people should watch for symptoms and should call their health provider if symptoms develop.
· Pregnant women, infants age one or younger, and severely immunocompromised people can still receive immune globulin up to 6 days after exposure to help prevent illness.

The dates and times of concern are:

· Thursday, June 22 - Kaiser Permanente Salmon Creek (Vancouver) facility, from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
· Saturday, June 24 - Kaiser Permanente East Interstate Emergicenter(Portland) facility, from 6:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.
· Monday, June 26 - Kaiser Permanente East Interstate Emergicenter (Portland) facility, from 9 a.m. to noon.

Additionally, the man visited two Clark County businesses. The business addresses and dates and times of concern are:

· Oscar's, 4901 NE St. John's Road, June 22, 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.
· Walgreen’s, 3200 NE 52nd St. , June 22, 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.

Persons who were at these businesses at these times should take the same precautions noted above.

In general, persons can be considered immune if they:
· were born in 1956 or earlier;
· have documentation of 2 measles or MMR vaccinations;
· have a history of physician-diagnosed measles; or
· have laboratory test results showing the presence of measles antibodies.

Kaiser Permanente members should call their primary care provider to check their vaccination status. If they don’t have a primary care provider, they can contact the advice nurse at (800) 813-2000 in Clark County, or (503) 813-2000 in Portland. Kaiser Permanente members can obtain measles vaccinations at most Kaiser Permanente facilities on a walk-in basis.

Exposed people who are not Kaiser Permanente members should contact their regular physician or their local health department for information. "Don't delay," Melnick urged. "Those who may have been exposed on June 26 must be immunized by June 29 for the shot to have time to kick in. If you were exposed on Monday, you only have a couple of days." People exposed June 22 or later who are pregnant, immunocompromised, or less than one year old should receive immune globulin rather than vaccine. Telephone numbers for local health jurisdictions include:
· Clark County - (360) 397-8206
· Multnomah County - (503) 988-3816
· Clackamas County - (503) 655-8411
· Washington County - (503) 846-3594
· Cowlitz County - (360) 414-5595

If you may have been exposed and you develop any of the early symptoms of measles, contact your physician or local health department for advice immediately. It takes 7 to 18 days from exposure before symptoms begin. "Do not go to your physician's office or a hospital emergency room without calling first," Melnick stated. "To prevent exposing other people, patients with possible measles must be properly isolated, and calling ahead gives people a chance to make the necessary arrangements."

Information about measles

Measles usually begins with a fever, red, watery eyes, runny nose, and cough, followed within a few days by a red, blotchy rash. The disease can be more severe in infants and adults.

Measles is one of the most highly communicable infectious diseases. Measles viruses become suspended in the air when infected persons cough, sneeze, or even talk, and can be inhaled by others sharing the same air space-even up to 2 hours later. Infected people begin to spread the virus around 4 days before rash onset and up to 4 days after. The incubation period (from exposure to onset of symptoms) of measles varies but is typically around 7 to 18 days-around 14 days to the onset of rash.

Special recommendations may apply to persons who work in health care facilities. Measles has occurred in some unvaccinated persons born before 1957. Medical facilities should consider recommending a dose of MMR for unvaccinated workers born before 1957 who lack a history of measles disease or laboratory evidence of immunity.

Email me: sstricklen@kgw.com

Oh wait!! I have to include this... it's a picture of this cute dog Iki from this fundraising event I checked out at the Ross dog park. I got to serve as a judge for the Doggie Olympics. Ever try to get your dog to do a trick on command at a dog park with a million distractions?! It was a riot!!! As was the "Best vocals, best costume..." you get the idea.

Iki Stephanie.jpg

June 21, 2006

Injury Prevention & Stem Cell Breakthrough

Hello!!

It's been a while since my last blog because my schedule got so turned around with anchoring, etc. I have a bunch of additional comments from some of you about the concierge medicine story I did and will post them today if I don't run out of time to get ready for my upcoming hit (by "hit" I mean my appearance in the 5pm show tonite).

So, I've decided I really should spare you the whiny story of the hour I spent on the phone trying to track down additional video of the rats that received the treatment.

Here is the important stuff:

This link takes you to the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine press release on this topic. It's well worth reading because it explains exactly how complicated of a process this really is. Since I have 90 seconds in my stories, I have to simplify. Reading the release at least paints a clear picture of the complicated nature of this work.

http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/Press_releases/2006/06_20_06.html

Onto the spinal cord injuries. I was desperate for a local interview on this topic today. A few doctors were not interested or available to talk to me. One doctor was willing up at OHSU but I had to agree to plug the idea of spinal cord injury prevention.

Making any kind of promise is not only difficult, but dangerous from a journalistic perspective. They can lead you down a slippery slope and I am loathe to agree to them.

This was, however, a great idea.

This story on the lab rats is super facinating but has just about zero applicability to us as people (at least as the research currently stands). That's why I intentionally did NOT seek out a person with a spinal cord injury for this story. I think getting that kind of comment is extremely premature.

Driving home the prevention message is really a great angle for the story and telling the doctor I would do it just means I can insist on that tidbit NOT getting cut from my story due to time. It's a win-win for everyone as far as I'm concerned.

Okay, the number one group at risk for these kinds of injuries.. according to Dr. Neuwelt at OHSU.... males ages 18 to 24.

Read more about the problem and the solutions here:

http://www.ohsu.edu/thinkfirst/

And here:

http://www.thinkfirst.org/

Shoot. It's 4:42 and I'm on at 5:13pm. Have to put on another coat of spackle (spackle = makeup). I'll get those concierge medicine comments posted shortly.

Email me: sstricklen@kgw.com
P.S. Jim.. thanks for the dog poem!! Let me know if the magazine accepts it!

Oh yeah, here is a photo of Russ and I after hosting the PSU graduation as it airs on OPB. I had just changed out of my suit for a marathon day shopping at the mall ((something I actually really dislike, but must do for work)).

russsteph.jpg

June 13, 2006

Concierge Medicine

Would you pay $600.00 for same day access to your doctor that included phone conversations, secure emails, and possibly housecalls? Some people spend more money on that in a year on lattes. But others could never scrape it together.

Email me. sstricklen@kgw.com I'll share some of your thoughts leaving out your names and email addresses. ((Update as of 5:20pm.. WOW they rolled in fast!! See responses below.))

This is a huge debate, with significant ethical concerns. Dr. Biemer is not the first, nor will he be the last doctor in the metro area to switch to this kind of healthcare.

We first wanted to air this story last week, but made a last minute decision to hold it so the doctor could get the last round of his letters out to his patients. Imagine finding out about this on the evening news as opposed to from your doctor! I also wanted to talk to ethicists directly to refresh my memory on the issues surrounding this debate and could not for the life of me line up a local ethicist who would talk.

I did find one out-of-state. Dr. Arthur Caplan at the University of Pennsylvania Center for Bioethics sees several ethical issues:

Concierge medicine creates a two-tiered system of healthcare that excludes those who can't afford it.

Concierge medicine forces people to pay for services that should be routine in our healthcare system. He sees this as a flaw in the system-- not with individual doctors.

And, he asks, where does the money go? Statistics show concierge doctors make more money on average than their conventional counterparts.

Concierge doctors will tell you the money isn't always better, especially if too few people enroll. They will express thier dissatisfaction with cramming too many patients into a day-- allowing 15 minutes each. They will complain about reimbursement rates that are so low they can't adequately cover the cost of providing care, let alone provide for thier families.

Here are some really excellent links that I looked over in working on this story.

This is an AARP bulletin on the topic:
http://www.aarp.org/bulletin/yourmoney/a2004-11-11-boutique.html

And here is a GAO report that is long, but there is a synopsis at the front:
http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d05929.pdf

This is written by a concierge physician:
http://www.physiciansnews.com/business/204.kalogredis.html

This is written by a group representing doctors:
http://www.kgw.com/news/pdf/ImpendingCollapse.pdf.pdf

And this is from another group representing doctors... the American Medical Association. Click here for the AMA position

Viewer responses:

J writes:

A year ago, due to my former primary care physician's retirement, I was looking for a new physician. In my pursuit the idea of concierge physicians was considered. However, even though I had the means to pay the annual fee, I did not feel the benefits were worth it. I continued my search and found a physician who is not a concierge physician, but one who spends an enormous amount of time with each patient, both in the office and over the phone when necessary. He limits his practice to a finite number of patients in order to keep the quality of care high. I feel very fortunate to have found the physician without having to pay any annual fee and I don't think I would be too anxious to pay such a fee in the future if there were any other choice.

Thank you for doing this story. It is certainly an interesting concept.

A writes:

I would absolutely pay my Doctor for more time and personal attention! I think $600.00 is a smart investment for email access, same day appt.'s , and even house calls!! Wow! I would know that when I called he would know me by name and face and be there in any emergency! If it were my children's Pediatrician I would do it too!!

R writes:

I think that we pay more than adequately for our health insurance as well as our deductibles when we go to an appointment.

That's all... again, feel free to email me: sstricklen@kgw.com

June 12, 2006

Beer for prostate cancer?

Who knows. Or rather, "not likely". But the research is important as scientists broaden their understanding of what causes cancer. And if it leads them to a supplement someday that works better than, oh, say.. drinking 17 beers... then we should be all for it.

Here is the OSU press release on it which offers additional information I couldn't include.

http://oregonstate.edu/dept/ncs/newsarch/2006/May06/beer.html

Assistant Professor Emily Ho and I talked and talked about this protein (NF-kappaB), too. I wondered if it was present in other cancers (it is) and if the hops chemical would work in those cancers too (under study). She also mentioned many researchers believe if you focus all your attention on one aspect the cancer cells will essentially get clever and find ways to get around what you've developed. That's why it's important they look at cancer treatments from a number of angles.

And while this is NOT the study I talked about tonite on the news.. it is indicative of the sorts of things I look through. What I wouldn't give for a scientific study translator. :-)

http://mct.aacrjournals.org/cgi/content/full/1/11/959

Zap me an email, or your favorite place to grab a beer: sstricklen@kgw.com

June 7, 2006

Alcohol & Your Heart

Okay, the one sure fire alternative to alcohol that provides a protective benefit to your heart is.................(drumroll, please)......

Eat a healthy diet and exercise.

Don't shoot!! I'm just the messenger. But a healthy diet and exercise goes such a long way toward achieving this goal (and many other healthy ones). It works so well that the researchers note people should NOT take up drinking because the potential for abuse is always there.

You can check out the entire study. The journal that published it was kind enough to make it available on-line for free. Many charge a fee.

Here is the main page for the journal (BMJ):
http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/

Here is the link to the study:
http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/332/7552/1244

And here is what the American Heart Association has to say about alcohol and your heart:
http://www.americanheart.org/presenter.jhtml?identifier=4422

On an unrelated note.. Vince Patton got a fancy new camera a couple months ago and he ran around grabbing all kinds of great candid shots. This was mine.

vincenewcamera.jpg

He's a fabulous photographer and has taken a number of amazing pictures. He tends to like wildlife and nature scenes (at least from the photos I've seen)

Email me:sstricklen@kgw.com

June 6, 2006

Tuna & Mercury

This is the sort of story that is a tremendous challenge to cover in 90 seconds. Shooting the story wasn't too difficult because we had more reporters than photographers today (which meant I ended up doing a story with file video from previous stories I've done.. to simplify things). What is tough is trying to decide what is the most important information and what I must leave out.

William Lambert at OHSU works for the Center for Research on Occupational and Environmental Toxicology. He had a great explainer on how the mercury gets into tuna in the first place. One of the main sources is coal fired plants which release elemental mercury into the air. That mercury settles into the water where bacteria absorb it. The elemental mercury gets changed into methyl mercury which is then passed up the food chain.. bacteria to phytoplankton... eventually on up to herring and then tuna.

The mercury comes to rest in the tissues of the fish. The older it is, the bigger it is, the more likely it is to have higher levels of this mercury concentrating in its tissues.

We eat the tuna and the mercury does essentially the same thing in us.

That explaination was :28 long. Needless to say I didn't have the time to include it.

Here are those links I promised you.

This is a link directly to the tuna information I found on the Consumers Report website:

This is the Consumer Reports main page.

http://www.consumerreports.org/

Next, we have the 2001 FDA talk paper on the issue. The FDA is under increasing pressure to revisit these guidelines:

http://www.fda.gov/bbs/topics/ANSWERS/2001/ANS01065.html

Here is the FDA/EPA response to the Consumer Reports article:

http://www.fda.gov/bbs/topics/NEWS/2006/NEW01382.html

Here is the EPA information:

http://www.epa.gov/ost/fishadvice/advice.html

I found this PBS report:

http://www.pbs.org/now/science/mercuryinfish.html

And last but not least.. Oregon's recommendations which are even tougher than Consumer Reports when it comes to kids.

http://www.oregon.gov/DHS/ph/envtox/fishconsumption.shtml

Phew. That's a lot of links!
Email me: sstricklen@kgw.com
A big hello to Scott who invited me to try the Mount Hood scramble. Judging by your description it sounds wild!!

June 5, 2006

Gettin' back into the swing of it...

Hey there! I'm back on my normal shift as of today (at least until summer vacations kick in). Thanks to all of you who emailed me about the Starlight parade. Yes, yes.. I now know the dance they were doing was the "electric slide". :-) I meant it when I said I didn't know!!

Here are a few pictures I snapped with my camera phone.

Our floor director Sean hung out and managed to stay dry. We were on the roof of the Hilton under a tent-- which turned out to be VERY necessary!

sean.jpg

This is what is behind the flowers. Basically boring stuff like headset volume controls, etc. And my cell phone where I text messaged John and friends during the commercials. That monitor is what we look at when we announce the floats... NOT what is going on down by us since the cameras are in a slightly different place than us.

behindtheflowers.jpg

Here is Kevin (in the background fixing the light), the poor guy at the station who has to retake my photo every 6 months because I'm incapable of sticking with a hairstyle. He's great and is always nice about it even though he has a million things to do.

kevin.jpg

And finally: Russ and me. You can see the crowds below. We had a GREAT vantage!

russstef.jpg

See you next weekend at the Grand Floral parade! I'm the street reporter. FUN!!
Email me: sstricklen@kgw.com

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