Articles about Health & Medicine

Sonograms Before Abortions

Governor Perry will likely sign a bill requiring women seeking abortions to have a sonogram and hear a description of the fetus. Not sure why the Wall Street Journal story about this carries a Dallas dateline, but it gives me an excuse to post and link. Let’s kill each other in the comments, shall we?

Got a Special-Needs Kid? Go to This Event

If you have a child with special needs, you know how hard it can be to accommodate those needs. The sea of doctors, schools, and therapists can be tough to navigate.

“How about when you first get a diagnosis? ‘Oh my goodness. Where do I go?’ ” said Meredith Roever. “You go through the pages of Dallas Child magazine, and you see a hundred different providers. ‘Oh my gosh. Am I going to get on the phone and start calling all these people and interviewing these people and finding out what they do?’ ”

Roever and Hollee Mills, co-presidents of the Park Cities Learning Disabilities Association, thought it would be great to put all of these providers in the same place at the same time. That’s why they came up with the Learning Difference Resource Expo. For four hours tomorrow, you’ll have a chance to meet representatives from about 40 providers of services related to autism, ADHD, Down syndrome, and dyslexia.

“We’re so excited,” Roever said of the event’s scope. “When Holly and I were talking about this, we said, ‘Wow. Do you think we could get 20?’ ” As it turned out, they’ve had to turn providers away. But no parents will be turned away tomorrow, and no one will be charged an admission fee. Pretty sweet deal, right?

Baylor Outdoes Anderson in Parking PR

It’s no secret that cancer treatment is big business, that MD Anderson in Houston is the field’s 800-pound gorilla in Texas, and that Baylor’s just-opened Charles A. Sammons Cancer Center is aimed partly at keeping patient bucks out of H-Town and right here in Dallas.

So it was interesting to see Baylor take a shot at Anderson right out of the chute, disclosing that Sammons had decided to offer free valet parking to disabled (including radiation oncology) patients instead of charging them $15, the standard valet fare. A story in the Morning News (sorry; it’s paywall-protected) said Baylor had modeled the $15 rate after the price at Anderson, but quickly switched gears “to do the right thing” … after a lymphoma patient complained to the paper.

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Jeb Hensarling Hates Public Health Care — Except When He Uses It

On January 18, the Dallas Congressman made this statement on the House floor before voting to repeal Obamacare:

“The American people don’t want it. It’s personal. Here’s my story, two days ago, I was in San Antonio, Texas, and my mother had a large tumor removed from her head. They wheeled her away at 7:20 in the morning, and by noon, I was talking to her along with the rest of our family. It proved benign, thanks to a lot of prayers and good doctors at the Methodist hospital in San Antonio. My mother’s fine. I’m not sure that would be the outcome in Canada, the U.K., or anywhere in Europe.

“No disrespect to our President, but when it comes to the health of my mother, I don’t want this President or any President or his bureaucrat or commissions making decisions for my loved ones. Let’s repeal it today, replace it tomorrow.”

More than a week ago, I called Hensarling’s office and asked two questions: (1) Is his mother on Medicare? (2) How much did she pay out-of-pocket for the procedure?

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Dallas Sixth Vainest City in the Country

According to the latest survey that combines three sort of random figures to come up with another sort of random ranking. And we lost to Hartford! COME ON.

Quick Questions For Thursday

1. Is there ever an excuse to whistle to techno music in an office setting?

2. If not, what’s a suitable punishment?

3. What’s your favorite No Doubt song? And do you want to hear it more? If so, click here.

4. Are you going to the Granada tonight?

5. Lemon, lime, orange or plain La Croix?

OK – go. And don’t disappoint me, people.

Former TV Anchor John Criswell is Mending Nicely

Photo provided by John Criswell

Photo provided by John Criswell

John Criswell (pictured), the original “media mentor” for Wednesday’s Child, successfully underwent open heart surgery last week.  The former WFAA-CH. 8 and KDFW-CH. 4 anchor reports –

“Hey everybody, just an update to answer questions and get correct info to my friends. I had open heart surgery Monday, January 3rd. Three bypasses for blockages of 99, 98 and 90 percent. No, I had no prior symptoms, no pain, nothing to say heart attack. Went to the hospital because I thought I had food poisoning and had become very dehydrated but it was atrial fibrillation.

“You can find me walking the neighborhood every day now and will be on the treadmill next week.”

One of the first to congratulate John on his recovery was his former WFAA co-anchor Tracy Rowlett.

Wanna Smoke? Move to Denison, Texas

Screen shot 2010-11-15 at 11.04.01 AM

Boy, do I love these maps. Here’s the latest from Slate. Twenty-six percent of the people in Grayson County light up daily, compared to 18 percent in Dallas and 20 percent in Fort Worth. Meanwhile, only 10 percent of Texans smoke daily, which must mean that somewhere in this state — but where? — nobody is smoking at all.

When You Need a Catchy Title, Joel Allison’s the Man

Most everybody knows The Good, the Bad and the Ugly was a spaghetti western starring the great Clint Eastwood. But did you know it’s also the approximate title of the talk whenever a Dallas hospital CEO shares his thoughts these days about health care reform? Joel Allison of Baylor Health Care System came up with the name first, because Clint’s one of Joel’s favorites. Joel then gave guys like Ron Anderson of Parkland the right to call their talks the same thing.

Long story short, Allison says the new law’s good part is that more people will have coverage; the bad is that coverage doesn’t equal access; and the ugly part is the way the reform bill was passed. He shared his take on the controversial measure during a breakfast at the D CEO office with a small group of top bosses like Jim Burke of TXU, Jeff Fegan of D/FW Airport, Lucian LaBarba of FreshPoint, Albert Black Jr. of On-Target Logistics and Richard Eiseman Jr. of Eiseman Jewels.

Abortion Clinic in For Long 40 Days

As I cruised Upper Greenville Avenue yesterday afternoon, it seemed to me that rush hour on a Tuesday was an odd time for a band to be performing in Harry Moss Park. The shindig I spied was apparently a precursor to the 40 Days For Life vigil that begins today. Similar vigils are happening nationwide, but this one targets the Southwestern Women’s Surgery Center.

Today Is World Suicide Prevention Day

Julies bookImagine sitting at a dinner party, making polite chatter with the guests at the round table, sipping fine wine with your dinner, wondering if they’ll be serving chicken or pork. People talk about their day, current events. Then one guest at the table says clearly, and very slowly, “well, I pulled the car into the garage today and sat in there with it running for 90 minutes trying to kill myself.”

Little jolting, eh? That’s the personal story Julie K. Hersh shared with  a group of CONTACT supporters gathered at the Ritz Carlton early this morning to mark World Suicide Prevention Day. Julie is the author of  Struck by Living: From Depression to Hope, a Dallas writer, mother and friend. We met in 2003 in a writing class I took as I embarked upon the changes in my life brought on by an empty nest. We bonded over our mutual love of words. Her book was conceived in the class and published last April. CONTACT is a Dallas organization of local volunteers and mental health experts who try their hardest to prevent suicide. One in five people in this country suffer from depression, says Dr.Madhukar H. Trivedi, Professor of Psychiatry and Betty Jo Hay Distinguished Chair in Mental Health, plus Chief, Division of Mood Disorders at UT Southwestern Medical Center, and my table-mate. (Typing in all those titles gives me depression!) He told me that UT is the center now of a tremendous amount of research into the brain and what it does, how it reacts to anti-depressant meds. Dr. Trivedi said they are just learning that the brain can actually re-generate cells, or neurons, basically replenish. And shocker — electro convulsive therapy (ECT) has an 80% efficacy in treating depression — a higher rate even than anti-depressants. ECT has been given a bad rap by the media, said Julie — recall One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest? — but it was one thing that helped her on the road to recovery. (more…)

What to Do in Dallas This Weekend: Sept. 3-6

Well, what do you know? It’s roughly noon on Friday. Too bad you’re at work, eh? Put aside your spreadsheet for a moment, please. We need to discuss your weekend.

Today

First of all, AnimeFest begins today. About 0.5% of you now have a quickened pulse and dilated pupils, and you’ll have no use for the rest of this post. Have a great weekend. The remainder of you, take heed:
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Correction: Parkland Construction Continues Apace

On Monday, I gave some props to the Morning News for their Sunday piece on how Parkland has dealt with the way it overcharged the federal government for certain medical services it has provided. In so doing, I wrote: “For those who are wondering why construction hasn’t yet begun over there, look no further than this story. Until the hospital settles with the feds (and it will have to settle, perhaps on a figure approaching $20 million), it doesn’t know how much cash it has to build.” This last statement came from a conversation I had with a friend who once worked at Parkland and who still has friends there who expressed this sentiment to him. Shame on me for passing along that gossip on this blog.

Parkland will have an official groundbreaking on October 28 for its new facility. That date has never been pushed back. Construction has not been delayed because of any Department of Justice investigation into what the hospital owed the feds, according to the hospital’s PR man.

A Hat Tip to the Morning News, Ctd.

While we’re at it, kudos to Brooks Egerton and Miles Moffeit for their Sunday piece about the shenanigans at Parkland. I was talking to a friend of mine over the weekend who is in the hospital compliance business, and he said that was the first time the Morning News got it right and on that level of detail. For those who are wondering why construction hasn’t yet begun over there, look no further than this story. Until the hospital settles with the feds (and it will have to settle, perhaps on a figure approaching $20 million), it doesn’t know how much cash it has to build.

D Magazine’s Online Directories: Fitter, Happier, More Productive

Today we launched brand-spanking new versions of our online guides to this city. We’ve made it easier, and more fun, to find just the right restaurant for that family get-together or that first date. Let’s say you’re looking for an upscale spot in Plano with outdoor seating. Select those factors in our restaurant search, and here you go. Then click in deeper and read our full review.

Or maybe you need a doctor. You need a little work done by an M.D. Or do you prefer a D.O.? You’re probably just looking for the best physicians in the city, regardless.  We even feature photos if what you want is the best-looking otolaryngologist that money can buy.

Please dive in and enjoy these, and all of our other, directories.