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October 4, 2013

Critical California health insurance coverage

As states across the country prepare for the rollout of health insurance coverage the state of California has become a leader. While some states have chosen not to provide a system for their residents to access affordable health care, California has set up Covered California, a market place or exchange where eligible individuals, families and small businesses can choose from a selection of affordable health care plans.

Enrollment for Covered California is now open and the insurance plans become effective on January 1, 2014. According to the California Healthcare Foundation, in 2011, 7.1 million Californians under the age of 65 did not have health insurance. Many of the uninsured want coverage, but cannot afford it; others who have insurance do not have adequate benefits to cover their needs.

As someone who advocates for social change as a volunteer with the National Council of Jewish Women, Los Angeles, as well as a registered nurse, a marriage and family therapist and a former employee of health insurance companies and brokers, I am encouraged by the prospect that many of those 7.1 million uninsured will now have access to health care coverage. Not all Americans agree with health care professionals like myself that believe health care is a right, not a privilege. The United States, despite being the richest nation in the world, suffers greatly, both financially and in public health outcomes, from not having coverage for all its citizens.

Americans pay twice as much for care per person and have a shorter life expectancy than other industrialized nations. And, sadly, the United States is 21st amongst nations in infant mortality. Despite having the best doctors and medical care in the world, babies still die in this country due to a lack of prenatal care, which costs very little and prevents numerous expensive medical problems.

In addition, according to a recent study by NerdWallet Health, nearly 2 million Americans will go bankrupt this year because of medical expenses. This is a non-existent problem in all other democratic countries.

Providing health care for all citizens is consistent with the family values that many Americans espouse. What could be more valuable to individuals or families than knowing that if they or someone they love gets sick, they have access to affordable, quality health care?

Covered California insurance plans will provide much-needed preventative, medical and prescription services. Most importantly, as of January 1, 2014, no enrollee can be denied insurance coverage due to pre-existing conditions.

I believe that everyone should take the time to learn about and enroll in Covered California. Even young adults in their twenties and thirties who usually cannot afford health insurance, and thus rationalize that they do not need health care, will find a basic health care plan in their price range.

Regardless of age, Covered California has plans for everyone who qualifies. For those whose income is below a certain level of the poverty line, the federal government provides premium assistance in the form of either tax credits or cost sharing subsidies. Individuals who have health insurance through their employers can keep that insurance and do not have to change.

In order to keep health insurance affordable it is necessary to spread the financial risk between individuals who are healthy and those who may have to use more health care services. Therefore, enrollment in Covered California is mandatory, and those who do not enroll will be fined.  The fine in 2014 will be low, but it will increase significantly each year thereafter.  Believe it or not, it is advantageous for everyone to have health coverage.

The Covered California website, www.CoveredCA.com, is easy to navigate and has a wealth of information. It also has all kinds of tools to help people figure out if they qualify, what plans are available and what their cost will be.  If you need more help, there are customer service representatives you can call. I urge all Californians to go on-line and learn what citizens of all other democratic countries know: that health care is an essential part of life.


Donna Benjamin is a Registered Nurse, Marriage and Family Therapist, former employee of the insurance industry and an advocate with the National Council of Jewish Women, Los Angeles. She lives in Los Angeles, CA.

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I AM, therefore I am worthy

I read this in a class taught by Wendy Haines of Illumine Education this past week. I was fascinated by the concept. It seems simple enough, yet, the messages behind it are plentiful. I wondered how many of us truly believe that- that simply by virtue of being alive we are deserving. Deserving of what is the follow up question I suppose. Those “inalienable truths,” the ones our forefathers wrote to be self evident? Many a wise sociologist could speak on that better than I. But what about the other stuff. The things we got and felt maybe as children. The things we we liked doing. The things we did that made us feel truly happy and free and like we belonged. Are these what determine our worth or make us feel lacking in worth as we get older?

We are often taught that hard work makes us worthy of rewards. Simultaneous is the teaching that it is not how much we own or have but with whom we spend our lives that create worth in a person’s life. Maybe this sentence, when read from the singular perspective of dream realization, can hold a deeper message. The subtleties behind these few words when TRULY internalized might have far reaching effects on our self esteem, and how we choose to further author our adulthood .

Either way, I like it. I like pondering the words in this short sentence. Maybe you will too.

Let me know.

In peace, and wishes for a joyful weekend,

Michelle

UPDATED SCHEDULE FOR THIS WEEK

10/6           no practice

10/7            9-10           with FANTASTIC sub, Linda Eifer- she is a specialist in Anusara and pre-natal yoga

10/8           6:30-7:45 pm

10/9            10-11

10/10          8:30-9:30     *****this IS our new time, late comers ALWAYS welcome though!

10/13          9:15-10:15    this Sunday class will meet the 2nd and 4th Sundays of the month

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Brain Dysfunction Persists Long After a Serious Illness

A sudden life-threatening illness is every family’s nightmare. A loved-one suddenly develops an overwhelming infection or is in a terrible accident. She is rushed to the intensive care unit (ICU) and is put on a ventilator (breathing machine). Many medications are started or she is rushed to surgery for her traumatic injuries. To the family, the first day or two is a blur of life-saving treatments, painfully waiting for the next update. The patient is on strong sedatives and non-communicative. She survives the worst days. The infection improves, or the surgeries fix the worst injuries. The ventilator is removed and the sedation is stopped. It looks like she’s going to make it. Families are usually unprepared for this next stage. In the movies the patient might spring out of bed and return home or a musical montage would convey her complete recovery over the next few days.

In reality the patient spends days in the ICU weak, confused and agitated. She doesn’t sleep. She recognizes loved ones only intermittently and has conversations with people who aren’t there. Other times she’s very lethargic and only answers questions with a word or two. Her family is terrified.

Doctors call this syndrome delirium, and it’s very common in critically ill patients. Delirium manifests in disorientation, agitation, and a level of alertness that can change quickly over time. Though delirium affects all mental process, the primary deficit is in attention. Delirious patients can’t focus on a task or on a question from one moment to the next.

The brain is usually an innocent bystander in delirium. Delirium is almost never caused by a primary brain problem – a stroke or a brain tumor, for example. Delirium is caused by a problem elsewhere that is disorganizing brain function – respiratory failure that is sending the brain too little oxygen or too much carbon dioxide, kidney or liver failure that is sending the brain too many waste products, or an infection that is sending the brain bacterial toxins.

In my training I was taught that once the cause of delirium is found and treated, the delirium might take days or weeks to improve, but that the improvement would be complete. I’ve discussed with many families preparing to take home a loved one that the patient’s periods of confusion would be shorter and the periods of lucidity would be longer, and over the next few weeks her mental status would return to normal. It turns out that’s not true.

A ” target=”_blank”>Intensive-Care Units Pose Long-Term Brain Risk, Study Finds (WSJ)
” target=”_blank”>Brain problems can linger months after ICU stay (Reuters)
” target=”_blank”>Disability after Critical Illness (NEJM editorial)

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Important legal mumbo jumbo:
Anything you read on the web should be used to supplement, not replace, your doctor’s advice.  Anything that I write is no exception.  I’m a doctor, but I’m not your doctor.

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Moving and Shaking: Samara Hutman names LAMOTH executive director, BJE supports schools

Samara Hutman, the new executive director of the L.A. Museum of the Holocaust (LAMOTH). Photo courtesy of LAMOTH.

The Los Angeles Museum of the Holocaust (LAMOTH) has appointed Samara Hutman as its new executive director. Hutman comes to the museum from the organization Remember Us, where she has served as executive director since 2011.

“Samara’s creative vision and passion will help further LAMOTH’s mission to commemorate and educate,” E. Randol Schoenberg, LAMOTH board president, said in a statement. “We are confident that she will increase our outreach in the greater Los Angeles area in order to teach future generations about the history of the Holocaust.”

Additionally, LAMOTH and Remember Us are joining together, with LAMOTH adopting Remember Us programs. These include the Holocaust B’nai Mitzvah Project, in which b’nai mitzvah students remember a child who died in the Holocaust, and the Righteous Conversations Project, in which high school students work with survivors in creating public service announcements focused on contemporary justice issues.

“We are all looking forward to the work ahead,” read a statement released by Hutman and Remember Us board president Cece Feiler, following the Sept. 30 announcement about Hutman taking the position. “We have been working closely with the museum’s president Randy Schoenberg, who shares our hopes and dreams for the continued growth of our many projects.” 

The museum’s search for a new executive director began in December 2012, when it decided not to renew the contract of former director Mark Rothman. Schoenberg served as director in the interim.

Hutman joined Remember Us in 2007 after her daughter, Rebecca, participated in the B’nai Mitzvah Project. 

LAMOTH is the oldest Holocaust museum in the country. In 2010, it opened its $20 million site at Pan Pacific Park, and has received acclaim for exhibitions such as the Tree of Testimony, a 70-screen video sculpture displaying 51,000 survivor testimonies courtesy of the USC Shoah Foundation…


Five Los Angeles-area day schools — Kadima Day School, Beth Hillel Day School, Temple Israel of Hollywood Day School, Weizmann Day School and Yavneh Hebrew Academy — will receive technical, financial and professional support from BJE—Builders of Jewish Education now that they have been chosen in the Generations LA 2 program. A kickoff training session marking the official start of this second installment of Generations LA, a three-year initiative that aims to help day schools grow and sustain endowment funds, takes place on October 23.

“Securing a place in this program is an incredible honor and assists our community in securing the longevity of Kadima Day School. Community donors will have the opportunity to truly have a lasting impact on the future of the Jewish people,” said Bill Cohen, head of school at Kadima Day.

The schools receive help in growing and sustain endowments – which BJE believes are vital to a school’s long-term existence – in the form of technical, financial and professional assistance, in return for them meeting fundraising benchmarks.

“The goal is to build a foundation for starting an endowment initiative and after three years giving them the tools to start the initiative and helping them to continue that momentum once the program is over,” said Rebecca Spain, Generations LA coordinator at BJE. None of the schools selected for the program currently has an endowment.

Moving and Shaking acknowledges accomplishments by members of the local Jewish community, including people who start new jobs, leave jobs, win awards and more, as well as local events that featured leaders from the Jewish and Israeli communities. Got a tip? E-mail it to ryant@jewishjournal.com

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Alex Rodriguez sues Major League Baseball, Selig

New York Yankees slugger Alex Rodriguez has sued Major League Baseball and Commissioner Bud Selig and accused them of trying to destroy his reputation and his career.

The embattled third baseman, who was suspended for 211 games for his alleged use of performance enhancing drugs, claims the league and commissioner are engaged in “vigilante justice” and are interfering with his lucrative contracts and business relationships.

MLB and Selig are trying to make an example of Rodriguez, the lawsuit said, “to gloss over Commissioner Self's past inaction and tacit approval of the use of performance enhancing substances in baseball … and in an attempt to secure his legacy as the 'savior' of America's past time.”

Filed in the state Supreme Court in Manhattan on Thursday, the lawsuit seeks unspecified damages.

MLB responded to the lawsuit by issuing their own statement, denying the allegations made by Rodriguez and accusing him of trying to circumvent the grievance process of the league and its players.

“For the more than four decades that we have had a collective bargaining relationship with the Major League Baseball Players Association, every player and club dispute has gone through the jointly agreed upon grievance process,” MLB said.

“This lawsuit is a clear violation of the confidentiality provisions of our drug program, and it is nothing more than a desperate attempt to circumvent the Collective Bargaining Agreement.”

In August, MLB suspended Rodriguez through to the end of the 2014 season. He was one of 13 players suspended for alleged links with the now-defunct Biogenesis clinic in Florida that is accused of supplying players with performance-enhancing drugs.

Rodriguez, 38, has denied wrongdoing and appealed the ruling. He continued to play – to cheers and jeers – for the rest of the season, which ended for the Yankees last week when the team failed to make the playoff.

Hearings on Rodriguez's appeal began this week, but a decision is not expected until later this month or next.

The lawsuit claimed MLB also improperly collected evidence against Rodriguez, including buying what were described as stolen Biogenesis-related documents for $150,000.

A 14-time All-Star and three-time Most Valuable Player, Rodriguez is the only player challenging his penalty.

He claimed in the lawsuit that by publicly leaking information into its investigation, MLB has prejudiced his appeal, tarnished his character and damaged his efforts to land lucrative endorsement contracts.

“MLB's public persecution of Mr. Rodriguez has known no bounds,” the lawsuit said. “MLB has permanently harmed Mr. Rodriguez's reputation.”

The other players accepted offers of 50-game bans, but the player known widely as A-Rod received a stiffer punishment because he was accused of other offenses, including lying to the investigators.

“While we vehemently deny the allegations in the complaint, none of those allegations is relevant to the real issue,” MLB said in their statement on Friday.

“Whether Mr. Rodriguez violated the Joint Drug Prevention and Treatment Program by using and possessing numerous forms of prohibited performance-enhancing substances, including testosterone and human growth hormone, over the course of multiple years and whether he violated the Basic Agreement by attempting to cover-up his violations of the Program by engaging in a course of conduct intended to obstruct and frustrate the Office of the Commissioner's investigation.”

Additional reporting by Karen Freifeld and Julian Linden; Editing by Bernadette Baum, Maureen Bavdek and Gene Cherry

Alex Rodriguez sues Major League Baseball, Selig Read More »

Letters to the Editor: Bet Tzedek, hunger and ‘Parts Unknown’

More Info Needed for Full Bet Tzedek Picture

I find multiple problems with the article “A Union’s Jewish Connection” (Sept. 27). These problems bias the article dramatically against the Bet Tzedek employees and give Jewish Journal readers far less than full information. They include: an unclear news angle clarifying why this story, now; a premise that puts Bet Tzedek employees on the defensive; and an assertion from Bet Tzedek management that Bet Tzedek employees want to sacrifice client services for their own needs.

The biggest problem stems from characterizing management as passive victims to inflation, shrinking payments from a state fund, and health care costs skyrocketing largely because of the recession.

In fact, a brief examination of Bet Tzedek’s publicly available tax returns shows an impressive pattern of 26.6 percent growth from 2009 through 2011. Not only did the growth outpace inflation, which averaged 2.4 percent during these three years, but Bet Tzedek maintained strong surpluses over expenses in each year.

To be fair, Bet Tzedek suffered a cataclysmic 16 percent revenue drop in 2008, forcing a devastating deficit. Bet Tzedek’s rebound, constituting truly impressive management and fundraising, has my deepest respect and admiration. (How management did that would be a well-deserved news story.)

These facts do not at all bear out the published explanation for the $900,000 cut in health care costs.

Perhaps management is still trying to undo the damage from 2008? I would need further information to be convinced of this, but at least it’s plausible and it would balance the conflict somewhat.

The absence of a more thorough explanation allows for this conclusion: In reverse of the assertion that Bet Tzedek employees are pitting their needs against their clients’ needs, it appears management wants to continue its laudable fiscal growth at the expense of its employees. Now, that would be a problem.

Mark A. Rothman, Los Angeles


Who Bears Blame for Hunger?  

Too many Americans remain unaware that the invisible scourge of hunger is experienced all around them ” (“Who Decides Who’s Hungry,” Sept. 27).  How many people skip a daily meal to get by financially? How many know there is a food bank for students at UCLA?

As New Deal and safety net programs are being dismantled, more and more middle-class families are at risk of hunger. Meanwhile, budgets at the local, state or federal levels continue to be balanced on the backs of the poor and vulnerable, even when the likelihood is that such programs will be needed more than ever in the future.

Appeals to humane civic and religious values and asking for calls to elected leaders, while worthwhile, can get us only so far. The situation will not change until massive pressure from the grass roots emerges to implement a living wage and meaningfully indexed funding for our shredded safety net programs. Power concedes nothing without a demand.

Gene Rothman, Culver City


The article should be retitled “What Is the Limit the Productive Should Pay to Sustain the Unproductive?” since nowhere in the article is “who decides who’s hungry” discussed.

To be sure, the incapacitated, who cannot take care of themselves, must be given governmental assistance. A measure of a society is how it treats its disadvantaged. Thankfully, no one goes without food or health care in the U.S. because of free charitable food banks and required hospital care for the indigent. But those who would rather take from the government (i.e., you and me) to feed and support themselves not only do a disservice to us, but to those who really need help.   

The federal food stamp program (euphemistically now called SNAP), an abomination of dishonesty and corruption, has increased by 68 percent in participation, and 116 percent in cost in the nearly six years of this administration alone. Do we now have so many more, in so short a time, who cannot feed themselves? And, if so, whose fault is that?

C.P. Lefkowitz, Rancho Palos Verdes


Food for Thought

I saw the “Parts Unknown” episode, and while it was cool to see authentic Gaza Strip recipes, the representation of the conflict was terribly imbalanced (“Parts Unknown,” Sept. 27). It gave almost no mention of the culinary advances in Israel proper and utilized only the most divisive and sensationalized imagery of the separation seam. As a foodie as well as a peacenik, I was disappointed.

David Meyer, Senior Rabbi, Temple Emanu-El, Marblehead, Mass. via jewishjournal.com


Correction

In “Who Decides Who’s Hungry” (Sept. 27), the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program passed the House of Representatives on Sept. 19. 

Letters to the Editor: Bet Tzedek, hunger and ‘Parts Unknown’ Read More »

Israel: European anti-circumcision motion ‘fosters hate’

Israel called on the Council of Europe to rescind a resolution which is “fostering hate” by equating non-medical circumcision of boys with female genital mutilation.

“This resolution casts a moral stain on the Council of Europe, and fosters hate and racist trends in Europe,” Israel’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs wrote in a statement Friday. “We call on the Council of Europe to act without delay in order to annul it.”

The resolution in question was part of a report which the parliamentary assembly of the Council of Europe passed on Oct. 2. The Council of Europe is the continent’s main human rights body. Its resolutions are non-binding.

Entitled “Children’s Right to Physical Integrity,” the report called non-medical circumcision of boys a “violation of the physical integrity of children” and mentioned it along with female genital mutilation.

“Any comparison of this tradition to the reprehensible and barbaric practice of female genital mutilation is either appalling ignorance, at best, or defamation and anti- religious hatred, at worst,” the ministry said.

Israel rarely condemns motions by the Council of Europe or other institutions that do not concern it directly.

“Claims that circumcision harms young boys’ health and body are false, and do not rest on any scientific evidence,” the statement said.

Several European Jewish groups have condemned the resolution, including Milah UK and the European Jewish Congress.

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ADL accepts Hobby Lobby apology

The Anti-Defamation League accepted an apology from the retailer Hobby Lobby for an employee’s alleged comment that the store “doesn’t cater to you people.”

Hobby Lobby was mired in controversy after a blogger reported that the chain neglected to stock Hanukkah items. After calling a New Jersey Hobby Lobby store and inquiring about the Hannukah items, the blogger was reportedly told: “We don’t cater to you people here.”

In a statement published Oct. 3 on the ADL’s website, Hobby Lobby President Steve Green apologized for the alleged remark and indicated that his company has “deep respect for the Jewish faith.” The statement made clear that the owners “do not tolerate discrimination at the company or our stores.”

The ADL also issued a statement saying that the organization “has no reason to believe that Hobby Lobby has refused to stock Hanukkah items because of hostility to Jews or anti-Semitism.”

“A store choosing not to carry Hanukkah items does not violate anyone’s rights,” the organization added.

ADL accepts Hobby Lobby apology Read More »

Female Israeli soldier called to Torah at military synagogue

An Orthodox female Israeli soldier was called up to the Torah during holiday services on a military base in what was being called a first.

At Simchat Torah services last week at a base in Haifa, the soldier received an aliyah from the gabbai, a civilian employee of the military, according to Kipa, a Modern Orthodox Hebrew-language Web site. The site said it was the first time a woman has been called to the Torah in a military synagogue.

Many of the men participating in the service were Orthodox and part of the Hesder Yeshiva program. While they were upset or uncomfortable with the situation, they decided not to prevent the soldier from having her aliyah in order not to embarrass her.

According to Kipa, the soldier, who is training to be a navy intelligence officer, graduated from a major national religious women’s seminary and participated regularly in services on the base.

Israeli military bases operate according to traditional Orthodox Jewish law, which does not allow women to be called to the Torah.

A spokesman for the Israel Defense Forces told Kipa in a statement, “Following the incident, an inquiry was initiated to clear the air and to clarify policies regarding such occurrences in the future.”

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