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Tune in to CHMP’s Healthstyles Radio Thursday, June 18th, from 1:00 to 2:00 PM on WBAI, 99.5 FM in New York City and streamed online here.  In this segment of Healthstyles you’ll hear this:

 

Co-Producer Liz Seegert takes an in-depth look at some of New York’s diverse family caregivers and learns that most face similar challenges. Ms. Seegert’s report is part of a journalist-in-aging fellowship from the gerontological society of america and new america media, sponsored by the silver century foundation.

Next time, Liz Seegert will report on one center that offers caregivers some respite by giving their loved one the next best thing to home.

 

Graduate Fellow Kristin Westphaln’s segment;  Tale from the Crib: How sex trafficking could appear appealing to an adolescent:

 

Healthstyles presents a “pimped out” tale from the crib as Kristi Westphaln tackles the topic of sex trafficking with a teen-aged twist.  The discussion of how sex trafficking could appear appealing to adolescents is joined by Ohio based expert pediatric nurse practitioner, Dr. Gail Hornor.

 

Join Westphaln and Hornor as they define domestic minor sex trafficking, highlight teen-specific risk factors, identify  the long term consequences of involvement in sex trafficking, and focus on resiliency factors that can help protect our teens.

 

Help us to turn off the trafficking light.

As adolescent recruitment into sex trafficking exists,

we must empower teens with tools to resist.

Protect with all senses: look, listen, and feel.

Adolescence can be rough- but hope and love are real.

Healthstyles in produced by the Center for Health, Media and Policy. To hear archives of previous programs search here.

Tune in to CHMP’s Healthstyles Radio Thursday,

This post is by Diana Mason, founder of CHMP and co-host of Healthstyles radio show, WBAI-NYC. Diana is the current president of the American Academy of Nursing, the Rudin Professor of Nursing at Hunter-Bellevue School of Nursing, and a global leader health care policy. She tweets @djmasonrn

For this week’s Healthstyles program, co-producer Kenya Beard, EdD, RN, NP, joins co-producer Diana Mason, PhD, RN, in discussing  the importance of addressing unconscious bias in health care and how it can be addressed. The program is part of Dr. Beard’s continuing coverage of health disparities on Healthstyles.

Photo credit, Amazon: http://amzn.to/1S4VgDr

Photo credit, Amazon: http://amzn.to/1S4VgDr

The program begins with Augustus White, MD, Ellen and Melvin Gordon Distinguished Professor of Medical Education and Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery at Harvard Medical School. Dr. White was the first African-American graduate of Stanford University’s medical school, and the first African-American  department chief at Harvard’s teaching hospitals. His book, “Seeing Patients: Unconscious Bias in Healthcare,” takes on the injustices of bias in medicine. You can listen to the interview here:

The second half of the program features Kimberly Richards, PhD, an Anti-racist Organizer for The People’s Institute for Survival and Beyond, an organization that seeks to build an effective movement for social transformation and undo racism. Dr. Richards discusses steps that people can take to reduce unconscious racism in health care. You can listen to the interview here:

Tune in to Healthstyles today, Thursday, June 11, 2015 from 1:00-2:00PM on WBAI, 99.5 FM in New York City, or online at www.wbai.org. Archived episodes are always free for listening and sharing, too: http://www.wbai.org/archive.php

Healthstyles is sponsored by the Center for Health, Media & Policy at Hunter College, City University of New York.

This post is by Diana Mason, founder

Not many twenty-somethings wear medical alert bracelets, or think much about about things like medication lists or emergency contacts. Birth control and daily vitamins don’t really call for inscribed pewter accessories, and many of my friends have even less than that to keep track of. But as a nurse, I’ve seen the complications that lack of accessible medical information can cause, and creating a way of letting providers know my info in the event that I can’t tell them myself is important to me.

 

For years, I slipped a business card inside my cellphone case with a few important names scribbled on it. Later, I found out that Siri could be accessed through a locked phone, so I set my iPhone to allow this, hoping whoever found me, in whatever emergency might befall me, would know enough to tell her to dial my “Moom.”

 

But recently, after I [belatedly] upgraded to iOS8, I realized that Apple has taken a giant step in helping me make my med info accessible: Medical ID. This function, which can be accessed while a phone is locked and an emergency call is attempted, can house everything from the name of your health care proxy to your list of meds, diagnoses, doctors’ contact info, and anything else you’d like to tell those attempting to save your life. To update this information and create your personal “emergency card,” you simply add what you want to be seen via Apple’s new Health app.

 

Lest you be swayed by laziness or confidentiality concerns, let me tell you why I didn’t hesitate to update my phone with my emergency contact (who knows all of my medical info), doctor’s name and blood type, as soon as I noticed the red Medical ID icon lurking in the corner of my emergency call screen:

 

I’ll never forget the young man that was beaten until brain dead on a street in the city I first became a nurse. His body remained in our ICU for weeks before a family member came forward to identify it. Another time, a young girl took a bad mixture of drugs at a nearby party – she arrived to my unit in the middle of the night, cell phone locked and contacts days away from finding her whereabouts. These, and my daily bike route around New York City, serve as pretty convincing personal motivators.

 

With that being said, I find it odd how little attention this pretty rad feature is getting in health policy news. Not only does the Medical ID allow users to store and safely share vital information about their medical care, it recognizes the life-tie we have to our phones, and the important part that they play in our daily health. If phones move past exercise and calorie trackers into the realm of care coordination, as they likely should, health care culture must shifts towards them. Coordinating your own medical records via your most-used device seems like the natural first step toward personal health promotion.

 

While I found a few comparable Android apps (Medical ID, ICE, to name a few), it seems that they all have to be downloaded, and some paid for, where Apple’s is part of its most recent software upgrade. The company’s commitment to health is pretty incredible, actually; you can set a Medical ID, coordinate your providers, and even participate in clinical trials via your iPhone.

 

To be fair, this post isn’t an Apple-sponsored advertisement. Their new health app has been criticized for many things; leaving out a period tracker for women is one that’s high on the boo-list. Further more, relying on your phone to convey your health info can be problematic – there’s always a chance that it’ll be MIA if ever your medical information is needed. Or out of battery. Nothing substitutes a card in your wallet listing your medications, contacts and history. To top that, absolutely nothing substitutes knowing them all by heart.

This post is by Amanda Anderson. Amanda is a 2013 Graduate Fellow who is now transitioning into the HealthCetera editorial team. She writes for a number of health care blogs and for herself, works in hospital nursing administration in NYC, and studies at Hunter-Bellevue School of Nursing where she runs the HBSON E-Writing Center. Amanda bikes, and occasionally tweets @12hourRN.

Not many twenty-somethings wear medical alert bracelets,