Mar 26, 2010

Erin Asprec Named CEO of Memorial Hermann Southeast

The Memorial Hermann Healthcare System recently announced the appointment of Erin Asprec as CEO of Memorial Hermann Southeast.

"I look forward to the opportunity to work closely with the physician leadership and employees at Memorial Hermann Southeast to continue to expand upon the high quality clinical care and patient-and family-centered services provided to our community," said Asprec.

For the past six years, she has served as the CEO of the Memorial Hermann Heart and Vascular Institute-Texas Medical Center. Asprec began her career with the Memorial Hermann Healthcare System in 2002, working as the director of business development and then as the executive liaison to Dan Wolterman, the President and CEO of the system.

“Erin has made a lasting, positive impact on the care we provide to patients at the Memorial Hermann-TMC Campus,” said Juanita Romans, CEO of Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center and Memorial Hermann’s Central Market Leader. “I am confident that she will bring her talent and skill as a leader to the Southeast Campus.”

Under Asprec’s leadership, the Memorial Hermann Heart and Vascular Institute moved into a new home in 2008 becoming the first free-standing heart hospital in the area. The Institute has also earned a range of prestigious honors from several leading organizations, including Thomson Reuters, the Institute for Healthcare Improvement and the American Heart Association.

Asprec completed her undergraduate studies in Chemistry at The University of Texas at Austin in 1994 and later earned a Masters in Healthcare Administration from Saint Louis University. Asprec and her family currently reside in Pearland, TX.

Mar 22, 2010

Prevalence of Impaired Glucose Tolerance (Diabetes) among Children and Adolescents with Marked Obesity

The recent epidemic of Childhood Obesity has also been accompanied by an increase in the prevalence of Type 2 Diabetes among children and adolescents. Thus are the findings of a Yale University School of Medicine study in a multi-ethnic group of 167 obese children and adolescents.

Impaired glucose tolerance was found in 25 percent of the 55 obese children ages 4-10 years of age and 21 percent of the 112 obese adolescents ages 11-18 years of age. While, Type 2 Diabetes, "the silent killer", was found in 4 percent of the obese adolescents. To read more about the study click here.

The study concluded that impaired glucose tolerance is highly prevalent among children and adolescents with severe obesity regardless of their respective ethnic group.

Recent Obesity Trends Will Snuff Out Health Gains from Decline in Smoking

Researchers from Harvard and Michigan have concluded that the health consequences of obesity in our population will offset the health gains made by our population's significant reduction in smoking. The study's conclusion states that the increase in life expectancy that our population should experience as a result of decreased smoking behavior, will be reduced due to the dramatic increase in obesity. Most alarming, if past trends continue, nearly half of our population - 45 percent - will be obese by the year 2020.

To read the full Harvard Science study, click here...

Mar 19, 2010

8 Minutes a Day to Tone Your Upper Body

You've made it through your weight loss journey. Now what? Whether it's the little black dress in winter or, for men, stripping down to your shorts in summer, those wobbly bits around the upper arms, chest and back can easily spoil the look. Here's an 8 minute body toning workout to banish the wobbly bits.

Equipment Needed

Any exercise aimed at toning your body needs something to provide resistance for your muscles to work against. Most of the exercises below use hand-held weights to provide resistance: these can be as simple as water bottles (or even tins of food) you can grip comfortably, or dumbbells in the range of 1lb-5lb/0.5-2kg.

Timing and Repetitions

10 reps of each exercise should take about 8 minutes. As with all exercise you should warm-up first. Marching or jogging on the spot for a few minutes interspersed with some gentle stretches will do the trick.

Caution

Body toning exercise can be a pretty painful experience if muscles have lain dormant for a while. The problem is, it's not until 24-48hrs after your workout that you'll realize you've overdone it! Body toning exercises should not be painful while you are doing them - if it is you're using too much weight. If you've not been exercising your muscles recently it's best to start with a weight that feels "very easy" and build up gradually from there.

The Workout

Exercise 1 - Chest and Shoulders
Lie on your back and grasp your weights with the palms of your hands facing up, and your arms outstretched to the sides. With your elbows slightly bent, lift your arms above your chest until your hands are almost touching. Return to starting position and repeat.
Exercise 2 - Chest and Shoulders
Lie on your back and grasp your weights with the palms of your hands facing up, and your arms outstretched above your head. Grip your weights and bring them over your head and down to your hips, by your sides - a semi-circular motion. Lift back to starting position and repeat.
Exercise 3 - Chest and Back
Sitting with your back straight (preferably supported) and legs straight out in front of you, hold your weights in at your chest with your elbows out to the side (parallel to the floor). Push your arms out straight in front of you then pull them back in. Repeat.
Exercise 4 - Back and Shoulders
Stand with feet shoulder width apart and arms by your sides, gripping the weights with palms facing outwards. Making sure your movements are slow and concentrated, tense your shoulder and upper back muscles, then slowly "shrug" them up and down.
Exercise 5 - Shoulders and Upper Arms
Stand with feet shoulder width apart and arms raised straight up above your head, grip your weights with your palms facing behind you. Slowly bring your arms forward and down, without bending at the elbow, until level with your shoulders. Lift back to starting position and repeat.
Exercise 6 - Upper Arms, Shoulders and Back
Standing with feet slightly apart, grasp your weights and bend at the waist until your torso is parallel to the floor. Extend your arms towards the floor with palms facing outwards. Lift your arms out to the side, keeping them straight, until parallel to the floor. Return to the starting position and repeat.
Exercise 7 - Upper Arms, Shoulders and Back
Standing with feet slightly apart, position your arms straight down in front of you almost against your body - with your weights almost touching. Bend your elbows and lift your weights towards your chin, bringing your elbows out to the side, in line with your shoulders. Return to the starting position and repeat.
Exercise 8 - Arms and Chest
The classic push up. With your hands shoulder width apart place your palms on the floor. Stretch out your body with either your knees on the floor, or if you're feeling ambitious, your toes - so you are supporting your body weight. Keeping your back straight and using your arms lower yourself gently toward the floor until you are hovering just over it. Push yourself slowly back to your starting position and repeat. Remember - don't lower yourself to the point where you come into contact with the floor, it'll be much harder to push back up.
Exercise 9 - Arms
In a sitting position with your back straight, relax your arms in line with your body. Grip your weights with your palms facing upwards and curl them up towards your shoulders, then back down again. Repeat. Keep your torso still and back straight, let your arms do the work.
Exercise 10 - Forearms
Holding your weight with your arm outstretched in front of you, tilt your wrist up and down repeatedly. Try doing this with both an overhand and underhand grip on your weight. Do one arm at a time.

Mar 17, 2010

Under Obama Plan, Health Premiums Would Rise


AP, WASHINGTON -- Buyers, beware: President Barack Obama says his health care overhaul will lower premiums by double digits, but check the fine print.

Premiums are likely to keep going up even if the health care bill passes, experts say. If cost controls work as advertised, annual increases would level off with time. But don't look for a rollback. Instead, the main reason premiums would be more affordable is that new government tax credits would help cover the cost for millions of people.

Listening to Obama pitch his plan, you might not realize that's how it works.

Visiting a Cleveland suburb this week, the president described how individuals and small businesses will be able to buy coverage in a new kind of health insurance marketplace, gaining the same strength in numbers that federal employees have.

"You'll be able to buy in, or a small business will be able to buy into this pool," Obama said. "And that will lower rates, it's estimated, by up to 14 to 20 percent over what you're currently getting. That's money out of pocket." And that's not all.

Obama asked his audience for a show of hands from people with employer-provided coverage, what most Americans have. "Your employer, it's estimated, would see premiums fall by as much as 3,000 percent," said the president, "which means they could give you a raise."

A White House press spokesman later said the president misspoke; he had meant to say annual premiums would drop by $3,000. It could be a long wait.

"There's no question premiums are still going to keep going up," said Larry Levitt of the Kaiser Family Foundation, a research clearinghouse on the health care system. "There are pieces of reform that will hopefully keep them from going up as fast. But it would be miraculous if premiums actually went down relative to where they are today."

The statistics Obama based his claims on come from two sources. (READ MORE...)