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This is a repost from Beth’s Blog.  I read Beth’s Blog everyday and learn something new about the world of digital media. Today she has a guest post by Taryn Degnan the Manager of Social Media and Online Community at Common Sense Media.  You can find her on Twitter @TarynIdana

facebook page organ donation (1)

Social Media is Saving Lives. How’s That for ROI? by Taryn Degnan

  • Pasadena mom uses social media to find organ donor for daughter.
  • Kwirti Dwivedi finds a kidney for ailing mom via social media.
  • Facebook Organ Donor Initiative Prompts 100,000 Users To Select New Option.

Friends, those news headlines are real, and it means that something wild and crazy is happening online. Perfect strangers are connecting through social media to give and receive life every day. Read the rest of the post here

This is a repost from Beth's Blog.

I reread this article in Bloomberg BusinessWeek. It’s written clearly and I know about the voluntary green building standards, Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design, or LEED. These standards give credit to builders that avoid chemicals that pose health risks. It was my interest in trying to decode the chemical industry’s policy stance against a bill that recommends the government continue to spend tax dollars on new construction based on LEED standards.

Chemical safety is a loaded issue.

The chemical industry consistently defends the safety of  chemicals used in  building materials that emerging scientific research points to a growing concern about their health impacts. Chemical companies do not provide basic health and safety data for the majority of chemicals on the market. Even with clear evidence of harm,  it is extremely difficult to stop the use of a chemical. See more about this on Health Care Without Harm.

The chemical industry is protecting their ability to keep selling materials they want builders to use and continue to claim that the evidence of their harm doesn’t exist.

This chemical industry stance is not new.

There’s another environmental upside to LEED buildings – energy savings. Evidence shows they are energy efficient (the Green Building Council reports that improvements to the U.S. Treasury building saves taxpayers $3.5 million a year in energy and leasing costs).

The chemical industry wants to put a kabosh on passing The Shaheen and Portman bill S. 761, The Energy Savings and Industrial Competitive Act of 2013.

They complain that LEED standard building is making health policy. And that’s a no-no?

I’ve always been interested in how the built space influences our health – from our homes, schools, work places and outdoor spaces. Urban Planning history comes out of public health – when we realized that a factory spewing toxic materials into the air can’t be built next to residential neighborhoods. That’s how we got the zoning laws we have today.

As a public health nurse with a graduate degree in urban planning,  Health Care Without Harm has been bookmarked on my computer for the past 15 years.

Ten years ago, I was involved with a green build-out of an integrative health care center, not new construction so not LEED certified, but designed and built out using green materials in the construction of a space in a pre-existing building.

I loved to be on-site to watch this build-out happen. The construction crew at the time thought this whole idea of green materials was hilarious and told lots of great jokes about the seaweed acoustic ceiling tiles and cork flooring. Remember, this was an early adoptor moment for a major medical center.

About eight weeks into the job one of the workers came over to me to tell me that, “It’s crazy but he noticed he has less headaches and stuffiness since working on this job”. Teachable moments. Slowly guys would tell me they really felt the difference. No smelly products.

Chemical industry – your argument is weak. This is good health policy and a time when we can remove silos and pass good policy that impacts the public’s health.

The article mentions they’ve already changed some aspects of the Shaheen and Portman bill is S. 761.to make it more palatable to the chemical industry. I hope it’s not diluted to being pointless.

My vote is that we use tax dollars to build LEED certified buildings.

Chemical industry – go innovate and design safer materials. Our health depends on it.

   Barbara Glickstein

I reread this article in Bloomberg BusinessWeek.

Charles Cullen is arguably the most prolific serial killer the U.S. has ever known. A registered nurse, Cullen deliberately and randomly killed between 40 and 300 patients who were hospitalized in hospitals in New Jersey and Pennsylvania before being caught at the end of 2003. His heinous crimes were intentionally or unintentionally abetted by hospital executives that failed to report Cullen to the authorities when his pattern of killings was discovered.

Tonight at 11:00 on WBAI (99.5FM; wbai.org), Healthstyles will feature the first of a two-part interview by moderator Diana Mason, RN, PhD, of award-winning journalist Charles Graeber about his investigation into these occurrences that are profiled in his new book, The Good Nurse: A True Story of Medicine, Madness and Murder. They are joined by nurse attorney Edie Brous, RN, JD, as they discuss the legal and policy implications of this shocking story.

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

Charles Cullen is arguably the most prolific