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1000 Cures for 200 Ailments: Integrated Alternative and Conventional Treatments for the Most Common Illnesses

Marshall Editions
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SYMPTOMS • Breathing becomes either very slow or very fast • Frequent unconsciousness • Pale skin • Clammy skin and sweating • Dizziness, confusion, or disorientation • Shaking and trembling TREATMENT GOAL Severe shock requires immediate emergency treatment. Call emergency services, check the victim's breathing, and loosen any tight-fitting clothes. Keep the patient as warm and comfortable as possible, and stay close until help arrives. T If shock is suspected, the first thing to do is call the emergency services for advice.

Six Degrees: Our Future on a Hotter Planet

Mark Lynas
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Death will be only minutes away unless the emergency services can quickly get the victim into intensive care. These emergency services failed to save over 10,000 Parisian heatstroke victims in the summer of 2003. Mortuaries quickly ran out of space as hundreds of dead bodies, mainly of elderly and marginalised people, were brought in each night. The crisis caused a political furore as people accused politicians and municipal administrators of being more concerned with their long August holidays than with saving lives in the capital.

Overtreated: Why Too Much Medicine Is Making Us Sicker and Poorer

Shannon Brownlee
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Many cities now face a shortfall of emergency services, and hospitals routinely divert ambulances because their emergency departments are completely full. In Cincinnati, for example, diversions were so rare before 1998 that the city didn't even track them. By 2002, the total amount of time the city's hospitals were on divert status had jumped to 1,970 hours annually, and the problem just keeps getting worse. In the month of December 2003 alone, emergency rooms were on divert status for 1,935 hours. That's the equivalent of nearly eighty-two days.
They would be paid for emergency services only. Fewer than 1 o percent of hospitals in the country have instituted electronic medical records, and the health care industry as a whole spends less than 3 percent of its revenue on information technology, far less than the 10 percent that other information-intensive industries, like the airlines, spend. Some hospitals have put in systems only to pull the plug when doctors rebelled.

Six Degrees: Our Future on a Hotter Planet

Mark Lynas
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Ninety people were rescued that day, and amazingly no lives were lost or injuries reported - a tribute to the professionalism of the Swiss mountain guides and emergency services. The mountain remained closed for days afterwards as experts tried to assess the likelihood of further rockfalls taking place. In fact, falling rocks were not the only hazard in the area: on the same day as the Matterhorn drama was taking place, massive chunks of ice broke off from a glacier above the nearby resort of Grindelwald and plunged into a river, causing a two-metre-high wave to flood down the mountain.
These emergency services failed to save over 10,000 Parisian heatstroke victims in the summer of 2003. Mortuaries quickly ran out of space as hundreds of dead bodies, mainly of elderly and marginalised people, were brought in each night. The crisis caused a political furore as people accused politicians and municipal administrators of being more concerned with their long August holidays than with saving lives in the capital. Estimates vary, but across Europe as a whole, between 22,000 and 35,000 people are thought to have died.
That will at least give emergency services a chance to move injured people and conduct urgent repairs to roofs, power lines and flood barriers before the next cyclone moves in. Needless to say, these storms will also bring heavier rainfall. With more cloudbursts will come more extensive floods, but the hardest-hit part of the UK in this case will not be Scotland, but the highly populated south and east of England.

1000 Cures for 200 Ailments: Integrated Alternative and Conventional Treatments for the Most Common Illnesses

Marshall Editions
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T If shock is suspected, the first thing to do is call the emergency services for advice. Airway, breathing, and circulation should be assessed and CPR started if needed. Position the victim: Place the victim in a reclining position with the feet raised higher than the head. Do not do this, however, if it causes pain, if the person is unconscious, or if they have an injury to the head. If the patient is vomiting or bleeding from the mouth, he or she should be placed on his or her side instead of the back, and kept still.

What If Medicine Disappeared?

Gerald E. Markle and Frances B. McCrea
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It is all too obvious that emergency services do not work as well for women and blacks as they do for men and whites. CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE Critical care is a new medical specialty. The first hospital coronary care units were introduced in thel960s. The Society for Critical Care Medicine was founded in 1970, yet it was not until 1980 that physicians could be certified in critical care medicine.

The Natural Pharmacy: Complete A-Z Reference to Natural Treatments for Common Health Conditions

Alan R. Gaby, M.D., Jonathan V. Wright, M.D., Forrest Batz, Pharm.D. Rick Chester, RPh., N.D., DipLAc. George Constantine, R.Ph., Ph.D. Linnea D. Thompson, Pharm.D., N.D.
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To induce vomiting after ingesting something poisonous (after consulting with poison control centers or emergency services), adults are generally advised to take 15—30 ml of ipecac syrup followed by 3—4 glasses of water.9 Children age 1-12 years should take 15 ml of ipecac syrup followed by 1-2 glasses of water. Children under age 1 year should be given 5-10 ml syrup followed by one half to 1 glass of water. The poisoned subject should be kept moving and the head kept upright after taking ipecac. It may take up to 30 minutes before vomiting occurs.

Prescription for Natural Cures: A Self-Care Guide for Treating Health Problems with Natural Remedies Including Diet and Nutrition, Nutritional Supplements, Bodywork, and More

James F. Balch, M.D. and Mark Stengler, N.D.
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Consumer Product Safety Commission suggests that you press the reset button, call emergency services (911 or your local fire department), and immediately move to fresh air (either outdoors or near an open door or window). If you learn that fuel-burning appliances were the most likely cause of the poisoning, have a serviceperson check them for malfunction before turning them back on. Refer to the instructions on your CO alarm for more specific information about what to do if your alarm goes off.
Also, open windows and doors, turn off combustion appliances, contact emergency services, and take the steps listed previously to ensure your home's safety. • To keep carbon monoxide from collecting in your home, make sure that any fuel-burning equipment, such as a furnace, a stove, or a heater, works properly, and never use charcoal or other grills indoors or in the garage. Do not leave your car's engine running while it's in the garage, and consider putting weather stripping around the door between the garage and the house.

Bird flu poll reveals U.S. economic collapse likely in the event of a human pandemic

Mike Adams, the Health Ranger
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It can happen here and, as this poll is telling us, if it does happen here, the public is going to react in a way that will inevitably cause the interruption, or possibly even the temporary collapse of, essential public services such as law enforcement, electricity, fuel, energy, food, emergency services and so on. This is why, for two years now, I have been urging people to prepare. I am a strong believer in preparedness. I actually live my life with a philosophy of preparedness, regardless of external events, so I am not concerned about a hurricane, tsunami, earthquake, tornado or pandemic.

Worldchanging: A User's Guide for the 21st Century

Alex Steffen
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With a two-foot increase in sea levels and a commensurate rise in the intensity and frequency of storm surges, coastal flooding would heighten property damage, and demand for emergency services could cost $94 billion over the course of the century. The team evaluated three adaptive strategies that Boston could use to cope with costs and impacts of this magnitude.

Critical Condition: How Health Care in America Became Big Business

Donald L. Barlett and James B. Steele
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Calling it a "systemic breakdown," the department levied a $1 million fine against the Kaiser Foundation Health Plan for neglecting to provide "basic health care services including preventive care and emergency services." Kaiser said it would vigorously contest the finding. But in 2002, after a court ruled against it, Kaiser agreed to pay the fine, the largest ever assessed by the California managed-care agency. In 2003, the health plan paid $1.1 million into California's general fund.
The investigative report said that diversions "have impeded access to emergency services in metropolitan areas in at least 22 states since January 1, 2001 . . . with the result that patients had to delay needed care." In nine metro areas, medical personnel believed the diversions "either caused or risked severe injury or death to persons needing emergency care." The crisis in the ER is a symptom of shortages throughout hospitals caused by insurers' cost-cutting that has reduced beds and staff. From 1980 to 2001, American hospitals lost 29 percent of their beds. The total plummeted from 1.

Staying Healthy in a Risky Environment: The New York University Medical Center Family Guide

Arthur C. Upton, M.D.
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Attending Physician, emergency services, Bellevue Hospital Center (New York, NY) Richard Weisman, Pharm. D., Director, New York City Poison Control Center Robert W. Wissler, Ph.D., M.D., Distinguished Service Professor of Pathology, University of Chicago Medical Center SECTION I Introduction he notion that something in the environment can make people ill dates back to the Greek physician Hippocrates. In the fourth century b.c., "the father of medicine" suggested that illness can result from foul air, contaminated by the decay of dead plants and animals and other wastes.

Attaining Medical Self Sufficiency

Duncan Long
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You should also determine whether operating room services, x-rays, labs, and other emergency services are available at all hours, not just business hours. Complications leading to an emergency often can't be easily solved unless your doctor can get quick results from a lab or take x-rays to see what's going on inside you. Having to wait until the next morning or — worse yet — over the weekend might make the difference between getting the problem fixed and sending you for a stay in the morgue.

The Great Book of Hemp: The Complete Guide to the Environmental, Commercial, and Medicinal Uses of the World's Most Extraordinary Plant

Rowan Robinson
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Corey Slovis, director of emergency services at Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta, declared "the death penalty for smoking marijuana is too severe a penalty for anybody," but White House drug adviser Carlton E. Turner revealed the position of the Reagan administration, appearing on national television with the message that death penalty for drug dealers in his address at a PRIDE conference in Atlanta, Georgia, which Nancy Reagan and Imelda Marcos attended.

Staying Healthy in a Risky Environment: The New York University Medical Center Family Guide

Arthur C. Upton, M.D.
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Assistant Professor of Clinical Pediatrics; Director, Pediatric emergency services, Bellevue Hospital Arthur Fox, M.D., Professor of Medicine, Chief of Cardiology Irwin M. Freedberg, M.D., George Miller Mac-Kee Professor and Chairman, Department of Dermatology Michael L. Freedman, M.D., Professor of Medicine, Diane and Arthur Belfer Professor of Geriatric Medicine George Friedman-Jimenez, M.D., Research Assistant Professor of Environmental Medicine; Director, Occupational and Environmental Health Clinic, Bellevue Hospital Stuart Garay, M.D.
New York University Medical Center and Bellevue Hospital Center. He also serves as medical director of the New York City Regional Poison Control Center. He has in the past served as director of emergency services for Montefiore Hospital and Medical Center and North Central Bronx Hospital. Anthony J. Grieco, M.D., is a professor of clinical medicine and the director of the Cooperative Care Unit of Tisch Hospital at New York University Medical Center.

Making Them Pay: How to Get the Most from Health Insurance and Managed Care

Rhonda D. Orin
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When you receive emergency services you may have to submit claim forms. You should join an HMO because you prefer the plan's benefits, not because a particular provider is available. You cannot change plans because a provider leaves our Plan. We cannot guarantee that any one physician or group of physicians, hospital, or other provider will be available and/or remain under contract with us. Our providers follow generally accepted medical practice when prescribing any course of treatment.

Staying Healthy in a Risky Environment: The New York University Medical Center Family Guide

Arthur C. Upton, M.D.
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Attending Physician, emergency services, Bellevue Hospital Center (New York, NY) Mary Ann Howland, Pharm.D., ABAT, Clinical Professor of Pharmacy, St. John's University (Jamaica, NY), and Consultant, New York City Poison Control Center Robert Mason, Ph.D. (CI6), Division of Standards Development and Technology Transfer, Centers for Disease Control, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health J. Donald Millar, M.D., Director, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Gary Rosenthal, Ph.D., D.A.B.T.
He has in the past served as director of emergency services for Montefiore Hospital and Medical Center and North Central Bronx Hospital. Anthony J. Grieco, M.D., is a professor of clinical medicine and the director of the Cooperative Care Unit of Tisch Hospital at New York University Medical Center. He also serves as visiting attending physician at New York Veterans' Administration Hospital and as medical editor for the New York University Medical Center's "New Dimensions Healthwire" and "Radio Healthwire," produced in coordination with the Associated Press. Robert Nadig, M.D.

Attaining Medical Self Sufficiency

Duncan Long
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Accreditation is entirely voluntary, but can not be achieved unless a hospital meets at least minimum standards in most of the 28 different performance areas JCAHO covers (among these are patient care, medication use, operative procedures, staff standards, laboratory performance, emergency services, and infection control as well as other points). Ninety percent of the hospitals accredited have "Accreditation with Recommendations for Improvement"; this means at least one important area of the standards is not quite as good as it ideally should be.

Making Them Pay: How to Get the Most from Health Insurance and Managed Care

Rhonda D. Orin
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No requirement of prior authorization for prehospital transport or treatment, or for emergency services and care (Sec. 641.513). GEORGIA Baseline mammograms for women ages 35-39; mammograms every 2 years for women ages 40-49; and mammograms every year for women age 50 and over; or any schedule ordered by a physician for women in high-risk categories (Sees. 33-29-3.2; 33-30-4.2). Annual Pap smears (Sees. 33-29-3.2; 33-30-4.2). Annual prostate cancer screening for men age 45 or over, or age 40 and over when ordered by physician (Sees. 33-29-3.2; 33-30-4.2).
No requirement of prior authorization for emergency services necessary to screen and stabilitize a patient (Sec. 376.1367). MONTANA Baseline mammograms for women ages 35-39, mammograms every 2 years for women ages 40-49 or more frequently if recommended by a physician, and mammograms every year for women age 50 and over. Coinsurance and deductibles shall be no less favorable than for physical illness, with a minimum payment of $70 (Sees. 33-22-132; 33-22-1827). Well-child coverage through age 2, including well-patient exams (Sees. 33-22-303; 33-22-512; 33-30-1014; 17:48-6i).
When there is double coverage for covered benefits, other than emergency services from non-Plan providers, this Plan will continue to provide its benefits in full, but is entitled to receive payment for the services and supplies provided, to the extent that they are covered by the other coverage, no-fault or other automobile insurance or any other primary plan. One plan normally pays its benefits in full as the primary payer, and the other plan pays a reduced benefit as the secondary payer.
Your health insurer has promised you that, when there is double coverage, it will pay full benefits for everything except certain emergency services. 4. You have promised to give your health insurer the authorization that it needs to seek reimbursement from the other insurer, if your insurer pays first but the other one was supposed to do so. A similar conflict can arise when subscribers are eligible for Medicare. Medicare is a government-sponsored health plan, funded with money from Social Security taxes.

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ABOUT THE CREATOR OF NATURALPEDIA: Mike Adams, the creator of this NaturalNews Naturalpedia, is the editor of NaturalNews.com, the internet's top natural health news site, creator of the Honest Food Guide (www.HonestFoodGuide.org), a free downloadable consumer food guide based on natural health principles, author of Grocery Warning, The 7 Laws of Nutrition, Natural Health Solutions, and many other books available at www.TruthPublishing.com, creator of the earth-friendly EcoLEDs company (www.EcoLEDs.com) that manufactures energy-efficient LED lighting products, founder of Arial Software (www.ArialSoftware.com), a permission e-mail technology company, creator of the CounterThink Cartoon series (www.NaturalNews.com/index-cartoons.html) and author of over 1,500 articles, interviews, special reports and reference guides available at www.NaturalNews.com. Adams' personal philosophy and health statistics are available at www.HealthRanger.org.

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