The New York Times published an article about a doctor who was fired for vaccinating people instead of wasting vaccine. To quote the article: ![]() "...he had to find 10 eligible people for its remaining doses before the precious medicine expired. In six hours...Scrambling, the doctor made house calls and directed people to his home outside Houston. Some were acquaintances; others, strangers. A bed-bound nonagenarian. A woman in her 80s with dementia. A mother with a child who uses a ventilator. After midnight, and with just minutes before the vaccine became unusable, the doctor, Hasan Gokal, gave the last dose to his wife, who has a pulmonary disease that leaves her short of breath. For his actions, Dr. Gokal was fired from his government job and then charged with stealing 10 vaccine doses worth a total of $135 — a shun-worthy misdemeanor that sent his name and mug shot rocketing around the globe. “It was my world coming down,” Dr. Gokal said..." That's right: he was fired from a job that paid less than what had been making and charged for "stealing" the vaccine! I was stunned when I read the article. Read the whole article here: https://www.nytimes.com/2021/02/10/us/houston-doctor-fired-covid-vaccine.html#commentsContainer I wrote a letter to the Acting Executive Director of the Harris County Health Department and faxed it to her. Fax # 713.439.6080 There is no email contact given. I posted the text of the letter on their Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/HarrisCountyPublicHealth Here's the letter. You're welcome to copy, personalize the letter and fax and post it. Send them something! Let's try and get this doc re-hired. Gwen Sims, Med, RD, LD Interim Executive Director Harris County Public Health Office of the Executive Director 2223 West Loop South Houston, TX 77027 Re: The dismissal of Hasan Gokal, M.D. February 4, 2021 Dear Director Sims: Thank you for what must be hard work in dealing with this pandemic, but I believe you have made a serious error in the dismissal of Hasan Gokal, M.D. Firing this doctor because he vaccinated 10 deserving patients to prevent the loss of precious COVID vaccine was simply wrong. It was irresponsible of your organization in the face of this pandemic. The fact that Dr. Gokal is from Pakistan makes his dismissal sound a lot like racism. From the New York Times article published on the web, it appears that such an issue had no precedent in your organization. If you do not have protocols in place to deal with incidents of this sort you must create such conventions. I urge you to reinstate Dr. Gokal. I use FaxZero to send free faxes: https://faxzero.com/
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![]() I've written about this in earlier posts, so if you've heard all this before, sorry. I can speak with some experience now because I've lost 15 lbs. since August 2020. "Big deal," you say. "Fifteen pounds? Doesn't seem like much." Slow and steady, building better habits, that's the goal, and it's working. ☺ Here's the thing, though. I haven't given up anything to do it, nor have I started training for a marathon. I eat anything I like, I just eat less of it! I've increased my activity level a bit, too, of course. I visited 2 or 3 times a week a gym until the COVID-19 lockdowns went into effect. Now I walk the grocery store for about 45 minutes twice a week - as quickly as I can without running over anyone. Of course, I'm properly masked with 4 layers of cotton and 2 layers of polypropylene. I also walk my dog twice every single day at a quick-step. My aging dog is slowing down, though, so I have to stop and let her sniff around several times during our outings. I dance a little jig during those breathers. The neighbors probably think I'm nuts but I am getting better at the Texas Two-Step. ☺ I track my caloric intake/output carefully. My favorite online tool is MyFitnessPal.com, which lets you enter goals, foods and activities and calculates your progress. You can enter your own recipes or choose foods and activities from the database that's been built by others. You can’t really “burn” enough calories to lose weight without cutting calories, too. You can hit the gym, walk, row, or swim all you want, but exercise alone won’t make you svelte. And counting carbs is only useful if you're reducing calories, so why bother. Given that 1 pound of human fat is worth about 3,500 calories, you would have to add 3,500 calories of extra activity to lose 1 pound. You could walk 35 miles thereby burning 3,500 calories or do one of the following, daily. Each of these requires about 500 calories:
Researchers have found that while physical activity burns calories, it also increases appetite, and people may compensate by eating more or by being less active the rest of the day. Physical activity has many proven health benefits, allowing people who are physically active to live longer and healthier lives, but it’s not necessarily a good weight-loss method by itself. You cannot outrun a bad diet. No matter what messages the government or PepsiCo may send out, physical activity and diet should not be given equal...um...weight in any plan to control obesity. The message from food companies has for decades been that it’s our laziness that makes us fat. Nope, it ain’t all about inactivity; it’s much more dependent on what we shove in our pieholes. A better approach is gradual, small changes to both diet and exercise. It's working for me.
Give yourself a break, once in a while, and eat something decadent. You're in it for the long haul so an occasional 'slip' is no big deal. I think this will be a way of keeping my weight under control for good - it's so nice to see my waistline again! Let's hope I can continue. Stay tuned... |
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