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Your Daily Posterous Spaces Update October 5th, 2011 Bell’s palsy

disables facial muscles of about 40,000 Americans each

year<http://ptmanagerblog.com/bells-palsy-disables-facial-muscles-of-about>

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Bell’s palsy disables facial muscles of about 40,000 Americans each year By

Lonnae O’Neal , Published: September 30 | Updated: Monday, October 3,

6:21 PM

That morning, I noticed first that I couldn’t spit. I was brushing my teeth,

but I couldn’t close my lips around the toothbrush, and my mouth didn’t seem

to work right.

Weird, I thought, but I quickly put it out of my mind. I was on assignment

for The Post and probably I was just tired from the overnight drive from

Prince ’s County to Greensboro, N.C. Perhaps it was the two glasses of

wine a couple of nights before. Maybe it was the flu. Whatever it was, I was

sure I didn’t have time for it.

I was traveling to Atlanta with two guys I was writing about, and as we

grabbed breakfast before the second leg of our drive, my weird-face feeling

intensified. Then my right eye began to ache, and a sudden fear iced my

spine.

I stepped outside the restaurant to stare at my reflection in the car

window, and I couldn’t process what I was seeing. I couldn’t move the right

side of my face, and my eye ached because I couldn’t close it. The parking

lot started to swim, and I willed myself not to faint.

“Something’s wrong with my face,” I told the guys haltingly. “I have to go

to the emergency room when we get to Atlanta.” But they insisted on taking

me immediately in Greensboro. I’m glad they did.

“My face is paralyzed, and I can’t blink. I think I’m having a stroke,” I

told the receptionist at the Moses Cone Urgent Care Center, though it all

felt so surreal. I’m only 44, and I’m healthy!

“You are either having a stroke or you have Bell’s palsy,” the receptionist

said as an EMT ushered me to the back. Turns out I had Bell’s

palsy<http://www.ninds.nih.gov/disorders/bells/bells.htm>

..

Bell’s palsy, which affects perhaps 40,000 Americans

<http://www.bellspalsy.ws/>a

year, is characterized by acute inflammation or trauma to the seventh

cranial nerve, disabling the muscles of one side of the face. This can cause

anything from slight weakness in those muscles to total paralysis sometimes

resulting in a face that looks melted. The inability to smile and blink are

classic symptoms.

The cause of Bell’s palsy is unknown, but theories include a herpes virus,

bacterial infections and facial misalignments that increase pressure on the

nerves. And it’s more common in diabetics and women in the third trimester

of pregnancy.

Eight-five percent of those with Bell’s palsy have complete or near complete

recoveries, often without treatment. But 15 percent are left with permanent

damage ranging from mild to severe. And for up to three months, the time it

typically takes nerves to begin to regenerate, no one can tell you which

group you’ll belong to.

The urgent-care doctor immediately put me on a 10-day course of high-dose

steroids to bring down the nerve swelling. She also patched my unblinking

right eye, which, left uncovered, could get scratched or sustain permanent

damage. I couldn’t pucker or fully chew, and even my eyelashes pointed

downward toward my cheek (I reminded myself of the “Sesame Street” character

Mr. Snuffleupagus), but my face wasn’t visibly drooped. Still, the eye

patch, which I had to wear continuously, was dramatic. My eye ached

constantly, and I kept it filled it with lubricant and taped it shut every

night.

*The novelty wears off*

For a few days, novelty carried me. My POV had changed dramatically. People

reacted to the patch with curiosity or sympathy. Friends, colleagues and cab

drivers all wanted to share stories of people they’d known — the young

teacher, the guy who was about to get married — whose faces had suddenly

fallen. And though little kids stared, I didn’t mind. In a strange way, it

was a relief not to worry about my looks. I could still manage presentable

or pulled together, but the eye patch relieved me of any duty to try to be

pretty or sexy.

But as days became weeks, I started each morning with a cry. Bell’s palsy

had come on dramatically, overnight, and I thought maybe it would be gone

overnight as well. Then I’d try to smile and realize I had at least one more

day of paralysis. I compared myself with the “before” Lonnae and wondered if

she was ever coming back. I wondered if maybe I would be one of the 15

percent whose faces would never fully come back. Usually after a few

minutes, I’d dry my tears and spend a little time in the mirror practicing

my new, enigmatic Mona half-smile. (Informed speculation has it that

Mona may have had Bell’s

palsy<http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20929717>,

though once you have it, you suspect it in everyone with a funny smile.)

“Ninety percent of our patients come in, and their biggest complaint is they

can’t smile,” says Jodi Barth, regional director at the National

Rehabilitation Hospital clinic in Rockville and a physical therapist for 30

years who has worked with Bell’s palsy patients for more than a decade.

“It’s devastating.” She and her colleague Gincy SteZar each see 11 patients

a day, and 80 percent of them have Bell’s palsy. Our faces are agents of

personality and communication, and some patients, says Barth, have come in

so self-conscious that they’ve worn scarves around their faces or wanted to

be seen in private rooms.

Though the precise cause is unknown, Barth says a majority of her patients

report experiencing “massive stress” before their Bell’s palsy onset. Her

theory: Stressed people clench and overuse muscles around the jaw joint,

increasing pressure in the area. I had been dealing with difficult personal

and professional issues and had been awakening with my jaws aching, and for

me, that explanation felt exactly right.

*Cheers all around*

I’d seen an urgent-care doctor, my primary-care physician (who ruled out

Lyme disease) and a neurologist, and they’d all said the same thing: My case

was mild, and I’d probably improve in four to six weeks, which made me feel

better. But it was in the NRH waiting room, with other patients just like

me, that I felt most hopeful. Family and friends had been great, but none of

them could fully understand how alone and afraid I felt. Barth saw me for

the first time and said, “You’re doing beautifully,” and I was nearly

overcome with emotion.

Inside NRH’s large therapy room I saw a woman blow out a candle for the

first time in eight years, and a 15-year-old, who’d come down with Bell’s

palsy when she was 12, show off the whistle she’d just gotten back six

months ago. And everyone cheered. We cheered over the reappearance of

wrinkles and dimples, and every small lift of a brow.

To reeducate damaged facial nerves, rehab experts such as Barth use a

variety of treatments, including biofeedback, massage and a device they call

the “mirror book,” which allows patients to practice making faces — my

favorite was the snarl — using the functional half of their faces as a

guide. They sometimes refer patients to physicians who use botox to help

with asymmetry and to reduce involuntary muscle movements (such as blinking

when you eat) that can develop on the palsy side of the face.

Barth says her team has seen marked recovery even in patients who have had

the condition for 15 or 20 years. But the biggest initial factor in recovery

is steroids, she says. A recent study has backed

<http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21099725>that

up.

“If you wake up with this weakness anywhere in your face, get to the doctor

or ER,” Barth says. “Getting those steroids in [within] the 24-48 hours is

crucial because the steroids are anti-inflammatory, and the nerve is

inflamed.” Recurrence of Bell’s palsy happens in only about 5 to 9 percent

of cases, according to the Bell’s Palsy Information

Site<http://www.bellspalsy.ws/>.

My neurologist, H. Avin, likened it to lightning striking twice.

Croen, a cantor at the Temple Sinai synagogue in Northwest Washington,

was eating breakfast with her son 31 / 2 years ago when she noticed “my

mouth wasn’t working right,” and her son told her she didn’t look so good.

“That night I couldn’t close my eye, and my face was totally drooped.” She

began seeing Barth and Stevar six weeks later.

She didn’t know if she could continue standing up in front of the

congregation and chanting prayers. “I was really depressed,” she says. “I

felt grotesque.” Today, her face shows some asymmetry, but it’s nothing like

it was. “I’m still making incremental changes,” Croen says. And she notes

that her singing coach says the combinations of therapy have actually made

her voice better.

From the beginning, I kept a Bell’s palsy diary and noted every oddity and

uptick in my condition. On Day 5, I couldn’t twitch my nose. On Day 11, I

could do a series of lagging half-blinks (it is very odd to watch your eyes

move as if they’re set on different timers). By Day 18, I could squeeze

several teeth into my half smile, and the ends of eyelashes were starting to

curl up. Finally, nearly four weeks into my Bell’s palsy, my blink had

largely returned, and I got rid of my eye patch. My smile was bigger, and I

decided that if nothing else came back I’d be just fine. That anyone

studying my face closely enough to notice something was a little off

probably loved me anyway.

In the following days, my face twitched constantly and my bad eye started to

blink in unison with my good one. My smile began to feature all teeth, and I

flashed it often. When I saw Barth and Stevar two weeks later, I was nearly

my old self again. It was exactly as my doctors and the medical literature

had predicted. I was a typical case with a fairly typical recovery.

It has been almost three months since that road trip to Atlanta, and I am

lucky. Not simply because I’ve experienced a nearly full recovery (my smile

still seems a bit crooked), but because I was able to educate myself, talk

to specialists and find a community of people who understood. If massive

stress had brought on my Bell’s palsy, surely those human connections had

helped mend it.

Meanwhile, my takeaway points remain simple but profound: Pay attention to

your body, seek help immediately if something seems off or “tingly,” and

recognize that if you’re overly stressed, you have to find better ways of

doing things, because sometimes a wake-up call can show up on your face.

© The Washington Post Company

PTManager Loves the DEEETROIT

Tigers<http://ptmanagerblog.com/ptmanager-loves-the-deeetroit-tigers>

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Medicare prescription drug abuse a problem: GAO |

Reuters<http://ptmanagerblog.com/medicare-prescription-drug-abuse-a-problem-ga>

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Medicare prescription drug abuse a problem: GAO Tue Oct 4, 2011 2:14pm EDT

WASHINGTON

(Reuters) - Prescription drug abuse by elderly and disabled beneficiaries

of Medicare cost the U.S. program nearly $150 million in 2008, highlighting

an area where the government can seek to save health costs.

According to a government report released on Tuesday, some of these patients

went to at least five doctors to get multiple prescriptions of drugs that

are often abused.

In all, 170,000 people enrolled in the Medicare Part D prescription drug

program went " doctor shopping " for drugs such as oxycodone and hydrocodone,

powerful painkillers that can lead to addiction, according to the report by

the Government Accountability Office (GAO).

Those 170,000 who possibly abused the system were 1.8 percent of the

patients who had prescriptions for these commonly abused drugs.

The study began in 2010, using data from 2008, the latest year then

available. Medicare enrolled about 43 million people in 2008.

In one example, one individual received prescriptions from 87 different

doctors during that year. Senator Brown, a Republican from

Massachusetts, dubbed it " taxpayer-funded drug dealing " at a hearing about

the issue on Tuesday.

Brown said oxycodone could sell for over $5,000 in some areas of the

country.

" Medicare Part D beneficiaries are abusing powerful drugs to fill their own

addictions or to sell them on the street, " said Senator Tom Carper, a

Democrat and chairman of a subcommittee on federal financial management.

" The controls ... put in place haven't done the trick. "

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) notified doctors about

patients who could be abusing prescription drugs. Blum, director of

CMS's Center for Medicare, said his agency's fraud division was receiving a

growing number of complaints about the issue.

Fighting Medicare fraud has gained renewed urgency in recent months as a

committee of Republicans and Democrats seeks ways to cut the nation's

ballooning budget deficit ahead of a November deadline.

" Everyone always has an angle to screw the government out of taxpayer

money, " Brown said. " We're just doing things so inefficiently, it's

mind-boggling. "

The GAO and others called on CMS to take more stringent steps to prevent

Medicare fraud, such as limiting patients to one doctor and one pharmacy to

better monitor abuse.

However, Blum said some patients with cancer, multiple-sclerosis or other

diseases with complex treatments, or those without primary care physicians,

may need to see several doctors.

" Some beneficiaries are bouncing around from emergency room to emergency

room, " Blum said at the hearing. " We have a very uncoordinated healthcare

system today that we are working hard to reform. "

" There is a balance between stopping behavior that is clearly fraudulent and

illegal, and ensuring that beneficiaries have access to medication, " he

said.

(Reporting by Yukhananov; editing by Michele

Gershberg<http://blogs.reuters.com/search/journalist.php?edition=us & n=michele.ge\

rshberg & >and

Gerald E. McCormick)

via

reuters.com<http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/10/04/us-medicare-fraud-idUSTRE7\

935LD20111004>

Why we need

stereotypes<http://ptmanagerblog.com/why-we-need-stereotypes>

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Why we need stereotypes 05 Oct 2011|

*This morning , my fourteen year old daughter said, " I hate

shopping! " She's excited about going to homecoming this weekend and she

likes to dress up. But she has no interest in all the hassle involved in

trying on different outfits and spending hours at the mall.*

As if that isn't enough, she's ambivalent about Facebook, she enjoys an

evening at home with my wife and me, and she does all her weekend homework

on Friday afternoon so she isn't cramming on Sunday night. No - you can't

adopt her. And believe me, there are some very " typical " adolescent

characteristics of too. But she's a reminder that to assume certain

things about a particular cultural group (in this case, U.S. adolescent

girls) might not be entirely inaccurate.

Stereotypes are more offensive to most of us than a four-letter word. The

very idea makes us cringe. How many of us have heard a full culture

described with one sweeping statement that may have a kernel of truth in it

but hardly applies to everyone from that culture? And who of us likes to be

on the receiving end of a stereotype?

But I'm going to suggest that stereotypes get a bum rap. Hear me out.

I'm the first one to speak up when someone starts to say, " When you

negotiate with an Indian, remember xyz. " See - I'm so paranoid about

stereotypes that I don't even want to perpetuate what would typically be

said about negotiating with an Indian. And when hearing that, I'd usually

ask, " Which Indian are you talking about? And do you mean an ethnic Indian

who was born and raised in Toronto, someone who lives and works in Mumbai,

or someone who grew up in Delhi but has worked for the last 10 years in

Silicon Valley? "

But this was supposed to be an article about why we need stereotypes. It's

simply irresponsible to think you can interact, manage, and negotiate with

everyone uniformly. In other words, we can't just " treat everyone the same "

and research shows we don't anyway. Subconsciously, we're making snap

judgments about new acquaintances as soon as we meet them. Our interactions

with people from different cultural backgrounds often occur so quickly that

we need to at least be prepared for some of the differences that are likely

to emerge.

For example, if you're making a presentation to an organization in a culture

where authority and chain of command are taken seriously (e.g. high power

distance), you want to plan your presentation in light of who has the most

authority, how to appropriately interact with individuals according to their

" status " , and how to refer to yourself and your role with your organization.

Even where to sit, how to describe your credentials, and how to facilitate

discussion are things that better consider the predominant view of authority

held among a particular group of people.

Now there's a chance you'll prepare a presentation for what you expect will

be a very top-down culture. For example, let's say you're going to make a

presentation to a group of Koreans at their organization in Seoul (a culture

that scores very high on power distance).

After some initial interactions, perhaps you find out that this is an

organization that actually operates with very little hierarchy and that the

adaptations planned for a top-down culture are unnecessary. Then it might

make sense to revert back to the way you would have presented to a group in

a low power distance culture. Although be forewarned. Even a " low power

distance " organization in Korea is still likely to be very different from a

parallel organization in Israel, one of the lowest power distance cultures

in the world.

In today's flattened world, the more typical scenario will be presenting to

individuals and organizations who span the scope of low to high power

distance, which then requires an adaptive approach to leadership and

speaking that accounts for many different preferences. We can't be all

things to all people but we surely better account for the varying tastes and

preferences possible in any multicultural group and do the best we can to

get a read on peoples' cultural values.

Here are some rules of thumb for how to constructively use stereotypes or

knowledge about cultural values in your work and relationships:

1. ALWAYS avoid negative stereotypes. It's never appropriate to refer to a

certain culture as " lazy " or " deceitful " . But knowing that some cultures

place a higher priority upon " work/life balance " or upon " indirect

communication " will make you much more effective and less disoriented.

2. Treat stereotypes as your best first guess. Stereotypes follow the bell

curve. About 80% of Koreans are " high power distance. " But you'll meet some

who are very low power distance. Most U.S. girls love to shop. But is

an outlier.

3. Be open to changing your assumptions. Keep your " best first guess " to

yourself. Don't immediately apply a stereotype to an individual or

situation. Check to see if your first guess was accurate and if not, change

it. There are 14-year-old girls who love football more than shopping.

4. Move as quickly as possible to get to know an individual and an

organization in it's own right rather than in light of broad

generalizations. Few of us like to be on the receiving end of stereotypes -

even if they're somewhat accurate. We want people to know us personally. So

whenever possible, move beyond the generalization and get to know the

specific organization and people.

The Cultural Intelligence Center <http://www.culturalq.com/> offers CQ

assessments that include an inventory and feedback on where individuals fall

personally along the continuum of seven cultural values (e.g.

individualism/collectivism, power distance, high and low context, etc.). Or

check out chapter 5 of Leading with Cultural

Intelligence<http://www.amazon.com/dp/0814414877/?tag=wwwdavidliver-20/>for

practical ways to manage in light of different cultural values.

via

management-issues.com<http://www.management-issues.com/2011/10/5/opinion/why-we-\

need-stereotypes.asp>

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own?<http://posterous.com> Change

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