Saturday, March 20, 2010

Welcome ObamaCare!!!

I am so excited that I can barely type. I am anticipating the upcoming House and Senate vote that will usher in a new age of health care.

As someone with pre-existing issues, this is a long time coming.

Get inspired yourself:



And here is the other one:

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy



However, inspiring speeches doesn't put food on the table. For folks that need the hardcore facts I've got that too. Click here for the Congressional Budget Office pre-liminary report.

That's a wrap for the scare tactics.

The Afterw@rd

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Designing McQueen

I'm not a fashionista but I just learned of a 40 year old white male, Alexander McQueen, decided to take his life today for no apparent reason other than having a grieving soul.

I feel for his his friends and family left behind. Now all that is left is lament for a lost talent and creativity. The woulda, shoulda, coulda folks now wonder what they could have done to intervene and demand that he seek professional help.

Here goes the addition of another benchmark statistic, an easy one for the books. A sad, true loss of a visionary.

The Afterw@rd

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Labels, Labels and More Labels

The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders is being revised and is intended for release in 2013. Be at attention, your mental state label could change. This would be the first revision in a decade and the manual's fifth edition.

Supporters of the proposed recommendation changes indicate that treatment strategies are label dependent and to provide appropriate treatment new categories of disorders must be created or old ones amended. Needless to say, much money is at stake. The pharmas are lobbying their buns off.

Over the last 10 years, and with much controversy, diagnosis of children with bipolar disorder has skyrocketed 4000 percent. Later finding that the label was inappropriate for the observed escalated temper flairs not accompanied by mood swings often experienced by those with bipolar mania or manic depression. The issue is that temper flairs are dealt with behavioral treatment while the other is best treated with anti-psychotic medication. Hence, we end up with the controversy highlighted recently in the Afterw@rd that poorer children were likelier to get antipsychotic medication. When you don't have a voice nor a vote due to a lack of resources for even a second opinion, your kids end up paying the price.

The funny or not so funny thing of it all is that what we do in the United States affects other countries, other cultures, other people.

Diagnostic labels matter, but getting the treatment right matters even more. Sometimes, it's as simple as embracing that person with their idiosyncrasy.

The Afterw@rd

Friday, January 22, 2010

Dance, Dance, Dance Your Limbs Away

In the post-Civil War dawn, Sri Lanka's own Jehan Aloysius choreographed what he calls a "Body Narrative" of Tchaikovsky's Swan Lake, where two-thirds of the cast of dancers are physically disabled soldiers.

As Jehan states, “At this time, when the rights of the disabled in Sri Lanka are in discussion, as well as when our country, that has lost many brave soldiers due to the war, is seeking to heal itself, we believe our show has the ability to reach larger audiences and spread the message of hope and courage.”

This is where art, heart, body and mind combine to heal, forgive, and yes, indeed find the courage to move on. This is what The Afterw@rd's about.

According to the UN's Human Development Index, Sri Lanka is so advanced in health and education statistics. This performance is just one more thing to add to the wonderful list of what Sri Lanka has to offer.

The Afterw@rd