At work a co-worker accidentally splashed my eye with some fluid. At the time I thought it was water, and it still might be, but about 20 minutes later my eye began to burn slightly. Not enough to cause alarm. I know flushing your eye is the recommended remedy but I didn’t get the chance to until an hour or so later. Then again once I got home, and now it’s still slightly burning, Should I be worried? Should I go to the doctors?
I’m confused.
Although I don’t think that’s a side effect.

I am doing a project for college and my part is disaster recovery planning. I have spent countless hours researching this topic but cannot seem to be able to get started with it. can someone help?
i am doing a project for college and my part is disaster recovery planning. I have spent countless hours researching this topic but cannot seem to be able to get started with it. can someone help?

the backup plan is for 5 doctors offices that decide to consolidate their businesses. they all had out dated computers so they need a whole new backup of all the files from all 5 offices along with a plan for recovery in event of disaster. the files being medical insurance files, email client software, buis. mgnt. software, information applications, and digital images of medical graphs. they need redundant connectivity available, a solution that will allow access to a replicated cpy of the patient information hosted in a host standby server located otside the the central office incase of any disaster on the central site. they need to discuss redundancy, disaster recovery, backups, and how security will exist (hippa laws) and be maintained.

can any one help?

For 1 week I was spotting very lightly or nothing at all..so I took a pregnancy test at home..positive..next day..another one…positive..2 days after I went to a free clinic and they said I wasn’t based on the urine test, so they referred me to another place…to get my blood tested…they didn’t do it tho…they just gave me another urine..negative again…but…very faint line showed up on the positive…2 weeks straight I’ve just been spotting…but before I went to the doctors..I was drinking alot of water…could that have diluted my hormones? And also I started bleeding more than usual and had big blood clots…is this a miscarriage? I don’t have that kind of money to go everywhere to find out what is goin on? Do you? This is very frustrating for me & sad…I was not expecting to have a baby and when i accepted it I was so excited…now that this happen I am confused…

My doctors haven’t been very helpful throughout this pregnancy. Im roughly 37-38w with my first, and two days ago i was feeling what felt like really intense braxton hicks periodically for over 16 hours. I had a dr’s appt the next day and i was 1cm dilated, 50% effaced. A monitor said i was contracting, but i couldn’t feel it. As of today i’ve lost several chunks of what i believe to be the mucus plug, and im crampy. Leg cramps, belly cramps, my vagina hurts periodically, some lower pressure, and a whole hell of a lot of back pain. Im having a hard time timing anything as i can’t tell really when it starts or ends because the cramping won’t go away. The back pain has made my eyes water several times and i just really want to know what’s going on. With doctors that aren’t very helpful, it’s hard to get any answers. Please and thanks for any and all information.
So timing my back pains was a dud, as i feel other cramping, pinching, tightening pains in between the back pains… I have a feeling a hospital visit is imminent.

Hi ive had problems waking up in the mornings.
Cant sleep well at night, been to doctors and was told to take herbal sleeping tablets, but cant wake up.

Got 2 alarms set and sleep right through them.

Is their any kind of personal alarm call , e.g. someone to call me on my home phone to wake me?

or
anything like a wrist band alarm, that will vibrate to wake me?

Its affecting my job as a hairdresser when i am always late for work.

Please help!
The alarms i use is my radio / beeper alarm, and my mobile phone.

produces patient billing applications for doctors’ offices. In working on the next release of you firm’s one and only software product, a small programming glitch has been uncovered in the current release that, if left uncorrected, poses a security risk to its users. The probability of the problem being uncovered is low, but if exposed, the potential impact on your firm’s 100 or so customers could be substantial-hackers could get access to private patient data and change billing records. The problem will be corrected in the next release, but you are concerned about what should be done for the users of the current release.
The problem has come at the worst possible time. The firm is seeking approval for a million loan to raise enough cash to continue operations until revenue from the sale of its just-released products offsets expenses. In addition, the effort to communicate with users, to develop and distribute the patch, and to deal with any fallout will place a major drain on you

I went to the doctors yesterday and he told me once again that i was 2 cm dialited and 50% effaced. Well i told him that i was in the L&D on friday night because i thought my water broke but it appered to be baby kicked me so hard i peed my self… So that was a false alarm… Well yesterday he checked me and wiped me with this yellow tape looking stuff and i took some of it home with me. He told me that my water didnt break yet but when i came home i had this sharp shooting pain in the pelvic and i went to pee and wiped my self with this tape it turned blue!!!! Now the doctor said if it stays yellow water isnt broke yet but it was blue when i did it… Now my mom tried it as well and hers was a light green color so im confused… Could the doctor have puncured my water bag a little bit? Im 38 weeks and 3 days today. With baby #1 so im not sure please help!!!!!

Sorry about the length… I promise it is worth the read!

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Besides paying some of the highest prices for health care, we have the dubious distinction of having the most heavily regulated healthcare system in the world. In no other country on earth are doctors and hospitals subjected to as many oversight and enforcement agencies, bureaus and commissions. Rules, regulations, and laws are duplicated, redundant, multiplied, magnified, and contradictory. Laws and regulations covering doctors and hospitals plus all the other parts of our healthcare system now account for over half of all the words, sentences, and paragraphs in our entire body of law.

If regulations could make a healthcare system work better, ours would surely be perfect. In fact, the opposite has occurred. Even those who believe that only government regulation can assure quality health care should face this fact. More laws and regulations are not going to fix our system. If we are truly concerned about the high cost of health care, if we really desire greater safety and higher quality, then we must undertake a dispassionate analysis of the current mess. If we wish to begin effective treatment of our healthcare system, we must first make an accurate diagnosis….

We have to go very far back to the first meeting of what would become the American Medical Association. This meeting was held in New York City in 1846. Twenty-nine allopathic doctors (MDs) attended the meeting. They wanted to establish a monopoly over health care in the United States for those doctors that practiced higher quality medicine, such as themselves. They felt there were too many different kinds of doctors practicing too many questionable forms of medicine. They wanted only doctors that conformed to their brand of medicine to be allowed to practice. They wished to set up their association as a medical elite and obtain a government-enforced monopoly over health care in the United States.

The following year the AMA was officially launched. Members’ efforts were at first slow to yield results. One of their first successes was in getting the exclusive right to positions in the federal government. Then, around 1870, the AMA began to find success at setting up medical boards in each state…

Soon after the medical monopoly was formed it began to push its agenda of destroying all competition. A well organized and funded nationwide purge of all non-MDs was undertaken. Over the course of the first half of the twentieth century this medical monopoly managed to shut down over forty medical schools. Their idea was to keep the number of doctors low in order to keep fees up. After WW II the medical monopoly started rigidly controlling how many of each medical specialty it would allow to be trained. So ophthalmologists, orthopedists, dermatologists, obstetricians, and others began to be in short supply. And of course when supplies are low, fees are high. The medical monopoly also managed to outlaw or marginalize over seventy healthcare professions. Protection of the healthcare consumer was, as always, the rationale for this power grab.

Whether the object of destruction by the medical monopoly be homeopaths, midwives, chiropractors, or internet prescribers, the purge is conducted in the same manner. No scientific proof or research data is offered to discredit these practitioners. The entire approach is one of character assassination directed at their profession.

On one occasion the medical monopoly did try to behave "scientifically," but this approach backfired: They tried to show that obstetricians achieved a lower infant mortality rate than did midwives, but when the data was compiled it showed the reverse was true—midwives had the better record. The medical monopoly quickly abandoned this approach and returned to their proven method of buying lawmakers and writing nasty unsubstantiated accusations in their journals. It seems the public always falls for propaganda that promises greater consumer safety…

We should strongly consider abolishing state medical boards. Do we really need an additional and separate secret police for doctors? If we elect to keep the state medical board system, then governors should not be allowed to appoint doctors to medical boards or pharmacists to boards of pharmacy. This is like putting the foxes in charge of henhouse security! If these are supposed to be consumer protection agencies, then staff them with consumers. The ideal board member is the owner-operator of a small business. Such boards could consult anyone they wish for technical or professional advice.

I am sure that the Federal Trade Commission has looked at this, probably more than once. The legal problem is that the AMA does not directly intervene in the marketplace. The medical monopoly is cleverly divided up into numerous components with legal separations that make it nearly impossible to mount an effective antitrust case. Th
The AMA makes sure that it stays at arms length from the state medical boards and even has the Federation of State Medical Boards in between. The communication, cooperation, and even conspiratorial planning between the components of the medical monopoly are unquestionable, but such contact is always couched in terms of protecting the public.

If, however, the state medical board system were abolished, or disempowered, the medical monopoly would suffer a fatal blow. Cut off the small head of a giant rattlesnake and the huge body of the snake is rendered harmless. The beneficial effect of such action to healthcare consumers, American workers, and the economy would be enormous and immediate. Less appreciated would be an even more important effect: The breakup of the medical monopoly would go a long way toward taking American medicine out of its current political orientation and back into its proper scientific orientation.
http://mises.org/story/1749
I can’t even imagine how far "innovative doctors" could lower prices for their patients if they were only allowed to do so.
I am in Medical School and would love to see the changes made to the system that the article above speaks of.

This is all I found on yahoo: Computer Security Specialist

A big chunk of the ARRA money is dedicated to health-care information-technology initiatives — digitizing medical records so they’re easier to transmit and share between doctors, hospitals and pharmacists. Computer-security experts who can help keep electronic medical records locked away from computer hackers and other unauthorized users will be in high demand as the health-care sector modernizes, says Laurence Shatkin, author of "Great Jobs in the President’s Stimulus Plan."

Other specialists will be needed to train workers on how to keep the data safe. A brief certificate program may suffice to get you started in this field, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) says. "There’s going to be a special role here of how to keep prying eyes away," Shatkin says.