Nursing homes are taking people

Paramedics refer to nursing homes as ‘God’s waiting room.’ In Florida, they are almost universally filled to the bursting point with patients who are largely catatonic, and are poorly cared for by an overworked and underpaid staff. What this means is that the staff that doesn’t quit for a better job are stuck there for one reason or another, and the usually begin viewing their patients as a burden.

During my 20 some odd years as a Paramedic, I would frequently walk into a nursing home and see patients who had been left there for hours, lying in adult diapers that were filled to capacity. I learned to associate the smell of unwashed bodies, human excrement, and disinfectants as the “smell of nursing homes.”
They hide these conditions from prospective clients and their families by putting the most healthy and most frequently visited patients in the front of the building, and hide the most neglected in the back. If you found a patient in the last room on the left as far from the nurses’ station as possible, in the back hallway of the building, you could bet money that the patent was the one that the nurses found to be the most bothersome, and the patient was most likely being ignored.
I once responded to a call for a patient because the staff claimed that they could not take his blood pressure. I asked when the last time his BP was taken, and they told me just 2 hours before, and that it was fine then. When I got there, it was obvious from the advanced state of rigor mortis that this particular patient had been dead for at least four hours.
Why does this happen? Because nursing home care for a patient who is on Medicare is a cash cow. The goal here is to keep the patient alive and under the care of the nursing home for as long as possible at the lowest cost possible, so that profits are maximized.
I know a physical therapist who was instructed to stop rehabilitating patients for walking unassisted once the patient could walk a certain distance. It seems that once a patient can walk a certain distance (IIRC it is 30 feet, but I may be wrong) they are no longer eligible for the higher amounts paid for nonambuilatory patients.

But one day last summer, after he disputed nursing home bills that had suddenly doubled Mrs. Palermo’s copays, and complained about inexperienced employees who dropped his wife on the floor, Mr. Palermo was shocked to find a six-page legal document waiting on her bed.&nbspIt was a guardianship petition filed by the nursing home, Mary Manning Walsh, asking the court to give a stranger full legal power over Mrs. Palermo, now 90, and complete control of her money.
Read the article, and it will open your eyes as to how the Medicare system is being played, and how this is causing people to be treated like cargo.

I once had a supervisor at an ambulance company tell me that it was our job to treat the customer well, but that the patient was not the customer, the nursing home and hospital was. “You see,” he explained, “the nursing homes and hospitals called for us, not the catatonic patients. The patients were just cargo, and no one cares about whether or not cargo is happy.”

I had a conversation with another supervisor where I was explaining that what we were doing was Medicare fraud. During this conversation, I was told: “We are making money, the nursing home is making money, and the patient doesn’t even remember his own name. We all win here, so don’t rock the boat. You want to keep your job, don’t you?”

You don’t need that

One of the most common things that you hear in Central Florida when you carry a concealed weapon is that you don’t need to carry a gun to the theme parks, because they are for kids, and no crime happens there.

The place is, of course, a target rich environment for all sorts of criminals. Child molesters, for example:

The report states when deputies searched Jiang’s phone, they found numerous inappropriate pictures of children between 4 years old and 7 years old taken inside of the park — including one in a bathroom stall.




Global Warming exaggerated

From the Times of India:

 Two of three scientists at a session on climate change and society at the Indian Science Congress on Tuesday felt fears of man-made global warming were greatly exaggerated…Singh said that if climate change was the cause of glaciers retreating, they should all be retreating at the same rate. “But in reality they are retreating at different rates, and some were advancing,” said Singh. “Despite the melting of glaciers, only at some places the sea level is rising, whereas at others it is constant, possibly due to the sinking of land,” he added.

Obama plays Robin Hood?

The Hill claimed on January 19 that Obama was playing ‘Robin Hood’ because he is offering free college to one group by taking money from another. That is NOT Robin Hood.

The common misconception of Robin Hood says that he was stealing from the rich to give to the poor. That is NOT what happened in the story. In the story of Robin Hood, the Sheriff of Nottingham was taxing the people of the kingdom into poverty, and using that money to the benefit of people who did not earn it. In other words, Robin Hood was stealing from the government’s tax coffers and returning the money to the people.

In essence, Obama is the Sheriff of Nottingham. He is taxing the people of the kingdom to enrich himself and the people that he is counting upon to make him the king.

Not an accident, negligence.

An Ocala, Florida corrections officer was killed in an unintentional shooting at the correctional facility’s firearms range at 3:30 this afternoon.

Officer Jared Forsyth, 33, was rushed to a Ocala Regional Medical Center in critical condition and immediately taken into surgery, but he later died from his injuries.  According to a police spokesperson, the accidental shooting happened just before 3:30 p.m. at the shooting range at the Lowell Correctional Institution

The article calls this an accidental shooting, but I disagree. This was not an accidental shooting, it was a NEGLIGENT shooting. If a shooter is following the four rules of firearm safety, there can be no one unintentionally shot. In order for an unintentional shooting to occur, two or more rules must be violated. That makes ANY unintentional shooting an act of negligence, not an accident.
The four rules are:

1 All guns are always loaded. (Treat them so!)
2 Never point the gun at anything you are not willing to destroy.
3 Keep your finger off the trigger until your sights are on target (and you have made the decision to shoot).
4 Be sure of your target and what is beyond it.

The future of medicine is in your smartphone…not

The Wall Street Journal claimed on January 9 that the future of medicine is in your smartphone. The claim:

Let’s say you have a rash that you need examined. Today, you can snap a picture of it with your smartphone and download an app to process the image. Within minutes, a dedicated computer algorithm can text you your diagnosis. That message could include next steps, such as recommending a topical ointment or a visit to a dermatologist for further assessment.

The article goes on to claim that there are already doctors that will see you and prescribe medicines to patients for the same amount of money as a typical copay. I disagree that this is the future of medicine for one reason:

profit.

The entire medical profession revolves around money, and the medical profession is not to blame. The blame lies with the government. Right now, I have no insurance, and it is cheaper for me to travel to Mexico for care than it is to stay here in the States. Why? Because the government is sticking with an outdated system where the only people who may compete in the medical sector are people who do things the way that they have always done them. This stifles competition and innovation.

Who profits the most from this model? The education industry and the insurance industry.

A few bad apples

In Orlando, a police officer is facing criminal charges for excessive force after beating a handcuffed prisoner in the jail. The officer in this incident was transferred into the jail after the city had to settle a lawsuit from March of 2014, because the officer had arrested and confiscated the cell phone of a witness who was recording him using excessive force on a person who was being arrested.

Officer Delio is accused of striking 41-year-old Robert Liese so hard in the abdomen with his knee that he ruptured the man’s spleen and tore his stomach lining. The incident happened Aug. 12 inside a holding cell at an Orlando Police Department substation downtown.

In fact, this incident is the fourth time this particular officer has faced criminal charges for excessive force.

 Tell me again how the police are the only ones we can trust to own firearms.

hands up, don’t shoot

These three mental giants are lucky that they are alive: (From a press release)

On
March 20, 2015 at approximately 3:30 a.m. a Kissimmee patrol officer was
sitting in his marked vehicle in the parking lot of 1532 West Vine Street
observing traffic.  The officer noticed a black Ford Mustang convertible
traveling east on Vine Street with three male passengers inside the
vehicle.  As the vehicle came closer to him, the officer saw the back seat
passenger point a long barreled rifle directly at him and he heard a loud
bang.  The officer believed the male had just shot at him.
 The
officer requested assistance and began to catch up with the mustang.  Once
additional officers were in position, a felony traffic stop was conducted on
the Mustang.  The three occupants were identified as Daniel Velazquez
(D.O.B. 11/30/97) who was the driver, Kelvin Lopez-Beerbower (D.O.B. 12/17/96)
and Ruben Lopez-Beerbower, who was the individual that shot at the
officer.   Two long barreled rifle style pellet guns and pellets were
found inside of the vehicle.  When asked why he shot at the officer, Ruben
shrugged his shoulders and gave no verbal response.
 All
three men were placed under arrest.  Ruben Lopez-Beerbower was charged
with Aggravated Assault on Law Enforcement Officer.  Kelvin
Lopez-Beerbower and Daniel Velazquez were charged with Criminal Conspiracy
Aggravated Assault on a Law Enforcement Officer. Ruben and Kelvin were
transported to the Osceola County Jail held on $10,000 and $5,000 bond
respectively.  Daniel was transported to the Orange County Juvenile
Detention Center.

The cops in this case showed remarkable restraint.

Medals for trolling

The next time that someone tells you that a militia can’t take on the US military, send them to this post. This female First Sergeant got a MEDAL for wasting time on the Internet so she could rat out soldiers for making disparaging remarks about women on the Internet. She reported them to the Army’s SHARP(sexual harassment and rape prevention) program.

Sure, there are men like Marcus Luttrell and Chris Kyle, but they are FAR outnumbered by whiny little pussies whose sole contribution to the US military is whining about political correctness and throwing their weight around.

Our military has become a paper tiger that is filled with units whose main job is to fight the politically incorrect.