September 2007

Improving on Perfection

Hannah Seligson blogs about how “the Siruis radio show Be Happy, Dammit gathered a dynamite panel to talk about work-life balance and how women can often be their own obstacle in the workplace.” One quote is “that women magnify the importance of things. Her advice is to reprioritize.” She links to the radio post.

Identity (personal)
The Sandwich Generation

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and you thought you needed to keep an eye on the kids when online

The graying of the Web
By Matt Richtel, The New York Times, September 11, 2007
via Cnet news.com

Older people are sticky.

That is the latest view from Silicon Valley. Technology investors and entrepreneurs, long obsessed with connecting to teenagers and 20-somethings, are starting a host of new social networking sites aimed at baby boomers and graying computer users.

The sites have names like Eons, Rezoom, Multiply, Maya’s Mom, Boomj and Boomertown. They look like Facebook–with wrinkles.

And they are seeking to capitalize on what investors say may be a profitable characteristic of older Internet users: they are less likely than youngsters to flit from one trendy site to the next….

Social networking has so far focused mainly on businesspeople and young people because they are tech-savvy and are treasured by Madison Avenue.

But there are 78 million boomers–roughly three times the number of teenagers–and most of them are Internet users who learned computer skills in the workplace. Indeed, the number of Internet users who are older than 55 is roughly the same as those who are aged 18 to 34, according to Nielsen/NetRatings, a market research firm….

They are sticky. And the older they get, the stickier they get. One thing that will slow this down is that as they age they tend to lag on technology. They tend to have slower devices and connections.

I think the new sites take that into account some but perhaps not enough.

Aging Care
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The Sandwich Generation

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Health care cost rises - more slowly

Kaiser Foundation study: Americans paying more for health care
By Mark Schwanhausser, The Mercury News, 09/11/2007

There’s only a bit of good news for workers and employers when it comes to rising health care costs: Premiums for employer-sponsored health insurance rose just 6.1 percent in 2007, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation’s prominent national survey, being released today. This marks the fourth consecutive year that the rate of increase has slowed, and the rate is less than half the 13.9 percent mark set in 2003.
Despite that slight relief:
• Premiums still have vaulted 78 percent since 2001 - rising four times faster than wages or inflation….

“What this says to me is that health insurance is increasingly becoming unaffordable for many working people and small- and medium-size businesses,” said Drew Altman, the Kaiser foundation’s chief executive in Menlo Park. “They’re getting nicked whatever they do, and they have fewer choices.”…

The New York Times, Smaller Rise in Health Premiums
By Milt Freudenheim, September 11, 2007

The cost of employer-sponsored health insurance premiums has increased 6.1 percent this year, well ahead of wage trends and consumer price inflation, but below the 7.7 percent increase in 2006, the Kaiser Family Foundation reported today.

Because doctor and hospital costs continue to rise at an even faster rate, the modest slowdown in insurance inflation mainly reflects cutbacks in coverage by many health plans, which have found ways to make employees pay more for their care. Industry experts said that without those measures, premium costs would have risen by 9 percent or more.

The total average annual cost for family coverage premiums rose to $12,106.

Aging Care
Health Care
The Sandwich Generation

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The Fine Art of Medical Diagnosis and then service coding and billing

World Health Care Blog has a post about A Chicken vs. Egg Issue in Medicine

A report yesterday indicated that there is a strange chicken or egg question about how at least one medical diagnosis is made. The issue is: Does the diagnosis precede the choice of treatment, or does the choice of treatment come first, then cause the diagnosis in order to justify the treatment?

It has long been known that physicians are idiosyncratic in their approach to diagnosing patients. In some cases, they prescribe a treatment in the hopes that it will show what the diagnosis was by either working or not working. The character “House” in that eponymous TV show is fond of this approach. And it makes sense when the risks and side effects of the treatment are minimal, and no other approach to diagnosis has worked….

He goes on to discuss how that can affect cycles in medication use as they work or don’t work for treating the symptoms.

As patients, we non-physicians may expect, and even prefer that diagnoses come first, and are based on something other than the need to justify a presumption or guess about the diagnosis. The fact that diagnoses of depression decreased so markedly, so fast, after increasing so dramatically before the FDA warning, at least suggests that diagnoses were being made on less than model criteria and using a variety of processes that may not fit “evidence-based medicine”.

Meanwhile Health as Human Capital has a post about Medical service coding and billing: a complicated system in need of nosy consumers.

Corporations often use health claims data to describe and understand the important health issues faced by their workforce. But medical services coding and billing have a business purpose: how doctors and hospitals get paid. We also recognize that claims data are powerful indicators of how reimbursement policies affect consumer and provider behavior. Depending on who pays, and what is paid for, the behavior of both consumers and providers changes, regardless of the actual health issues being treated.

The Wall Street Journal’s Health Blog posts Treat the Patient–Not the Computer

Sure, there are lots of efficiencies offered by computerized medical records. But the computer can also present an unwelcome barrier between doctor and patient, Michael Hochman, a medical resident in Boston, writes in this morning’s Globe.

Which has a comment that begins:

I think this article is representative of a major misconception about modern EMR’s. Not all EMR’s require typing in order to enter discrete data. One that I am familiar with can take points and clicks and turn them into common english sentences. The other issue that the industry struggles with is the following….

Aging Care
Health Care
The Sandwich Generation

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It begins with a phone call

Elizabeth of GenBetween posts about another blog’s entry that touched her:

So many times, when you read something about people caring for children and parents at the same time, it’s a financial “how-to”, or, list of areas nursing homes, or, agencies. But, sometimes you read something that just “speaks to you”, and, this article titled simply, “The Sandwich Generation” spoke to me, so, I thought I’d share it with you.

Then she talks about a couple of similar moments.

The Sandwich Generation

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Rethinking Retirement

There’s an article on CNN about Rethinking Retirement that mentions:

…”The baby boomers were the first generation to have a lot more career freedom, but it seems like [for] at least some of them, that ended up not being the case,” Randall Hansen, a career advice writer for the Web site Quintessential Careers, said.

 

“They fell into a job that they kind of hated or didn’t get as much satisfaction from but stayed in because of first mortgages, and then college tuitions, and now that their kids are out of college, now they finally feel like they have the freedom to change careers.”…

 

It isn’t retirement, its a career change. Freedom for one. Some freedom for one.

Aging Care
Social Services
The Sandwich Generation

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don’t forget to develop a habit of rss

subscribing to sites you want to have let you know when something new is postedand you can catch a glimpse before heading there
and finding out it isn’t as interesting a post as you’d hoped.

RSS made simpler

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The Sandwich Generation

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“How Stuff Works” is a handy site

How Stuff Works
Their motto is “It’s good to know” - yup
They can help you help others.

Years in the Making, Powerful Yahoo Mail Is Worth the Wait
Walter S. Mossberf, Wall Street Journal
Complete with video report.

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The Sandwich Generation

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you might want to check these sites out

The geeks know these sites, you might want to too

25 Sites We Can’t Live Without by time.com

The Sandwich Generation

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how to cook for yourself, make reservations…

Mashable is a geek’s good friend, sometimes good for non-geeks too ;)

Whether you’ve just arrived at college, or moved to a new city for your first job, after the dust settles, you need to know how to cook for yourself, make reservations, or even how to pick a nice wine (if you are of legal drinking age). For the Labor Day holiday, Mashable has compiled a list of 50+ sites to help you do everything from ordering groceries to making a reservation at a restaurant. Take note, college freshmen!

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Identity (personal)
The Sandwich Generation

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