I monitor my BP at home and my readings are never high. When I visit my doctor at the Texas Tech Internal Medicine building, my readings are always high. I've decided that the measurements taken with the automated cuffs are inaccurate. For one thing, the procedures in the typical hospital or clinic setting break all the rules. Your arm is hanging at your side, you are placed in an uncomfortable chair and typically you have just had your weight taken. I find that when you donate blood the rules ARE followed. Whenever I donate blood my BP is very good. Whenever I take my own BP at home using a wrist cuff, following the rules for use, my BP is never high. I just wonder how many people are diagnosed as hypertensive and medicated based on INACCURATE clinic and hospital pressure readings? A lot, I bet. There is a lot of money to be made, treating people for hypertension. I'm cynical enough to believe that the inaccurate readings in clinical settings are deliberate and are intended to increase revenue. But being labeled hypertensive can be the kiss of death as far as insurers are concerned. Once you are labeled hypertensive, you can never escape the stigma. God forbid you should be treated. I strongly urge people to learn to check their own blood pressure. If necessary bring your own cuff with you and check yourself before your BP is taken by the clinic/hospital staff. If your results are lower, dispute their readings. Don't let yourself be victimized by greedy health care providers. Hypertension is serious business. If you are truly hypertensive you need to be treated. But you can easily be misdiagnosed by nurses using sloppy procedures or deliberately labeled as hypertensive by greedy hospitals and doctors using poorly maintained or poorly calibrated automated cuffs. By the way, most doctors are incapable of taking your blood pressure using a cuff and stethoscope. Ask the nurse to NOT use the automated cuff. Have them take your blood pressure the old way, and insist on proper posture and arm position. Don't be a victim!
This blog is an ARTISTIC regional photo journal. I focus on mundane scenes. ANY AND ALL STATEMENTS I MAKE HERE ARE MY OPINONS ONLY! I OFFER NOTHING WHATSOEVER AS A STATEMENT OF FACT! The photographs are offered as ARTISTIC EXPRESSION ONLY! They are not representative of anything other than themselves. Most of the places mentioned here have surely changed substantially since they were visited. Check my list of recommended sites at the bottom of this blog!
Friday, June 27, 2014
Wednesday, June 25, 2014
Tuesday, June 24, 2014
More From Littlefield, Texas
Littlefield seemed a little strange to us because of the odd pockets of desperate poverty, the ramshackle houses scattered about, so near to neighborhoods of obvious affluence. In Lubbock we have a codes enforcement department and a health department, even though they aren't adequately funded. Littlefield seems to have nothing of the kind. Residential streets are not even paved, in some cases, within the city limits! Mosquitoes were a major problem. I doubt that they do any spraying. We got the impression that in Littlefield it is every man for himself.
Monday, June 23, 2014
It Keeps On Raining!
The rain comes in just the right amounts and just the right intervals to keep things nice and green. It is a very welcome change!
A few weekends ago my wife and I visited Littlefield. We were not prepared for the dire poverty we found in some neighborhoods. Littlefield must not have building codes or any kind of condemnation procedures. We saw structures that were not much larger than chicken coops, surrounded by rank weeds, wrecked cars, and piles of garbage, with someone apparently trying to live in them. These extreme poverty zones were within a few blocks of very nice affluent neighborhoods. What a crazy mix! Downtown Littlefield is chock full of ruins, too. I didn't even scratch the surface. We didn't see many signs of OIL BOOM prosperity. Littlefield's civic leaders must be fans of Ayn Rand. So I'll begin a little Littlefield photo series. Some of the ruins I could not photograph because they were inhabited!
A few weekends ago my wife and I visited Littlefield. We were not prepared for the dire poverty we found in some neighborhoods. Littlefield must not have building codes or any kind of condemnation procedures. We saw structures that were not much larger than chicken coops, surrounded by rank weeds, wrecked cars, and piles of garbage, with someone apparently trying to live in them. These extreme poverty zones were within a few blocks of very nice affluent neighborhoods. What a crazy mix! Downtown Littlefield is chock full of ruins, too. I didn't even scratch the surface. We didn't see many signs of OIL BOOM prosperity. Littlefield's civic leaders must be fans of Ayn Rand. So I'll begin a little Littlefield photo series. Some of the ruins I could not photograph because they were inhabited!
Thursday, June 12, 2014
Storm Clouds Over Wolfforth
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