People’s Pharmacy: Is mouth guard a health menace?

Q: Can a dental night guard contain BPA? Instead of getting a new dental night guard after three months or so, I continue to use it until it doesn't work. Sometimes they last a few years. I haven't noticed any problems, but I'm concerned about hidden harm.

A: BPA (bisphenol A) is an estrogenlike chemical that has been used in a variety of hard plastic products. The Food and Drug Administration recently ruled that children's drinking cups and baby bottles can no longer contain BPA because of concerns about the potential for hormone disruption.

Dental night guards are designed to protect teeth from grinding during sleep (bruxism). They often are made of hard, clear plastic, but it is not easy to determine if they contain BPA. Although dental associations reassure patients that there is no reason to worry about BPA exposure from dental materials, you could ask your dentist to acquire BPA-free night guards. Otherwise, replace your mouth guard more frequently, since BPA is released more readily from plastic that has undergone wear.

Q: I have been treating a scalp problem for many months. Prescription drugs such as clobetasol, ketoconazole shampoo and fluocinonide each help, but do not clear it up altogether. I still have itching and flaking.

I've tried lots of other remedies such as Head and Shoulders shampoo, organic baby shampoo, baby oil, jojoba oil, tea tree oil and Mane 'n Tail shampoo for animals, but none does the job. Do you have any ideas to clear this up?

A: Other readers have suggested remedies for itching and scaling that you may not have tried. One calls for rinsing the hair and scalp with diluted vinegar after shampooing. Another approach is to soak the scalp with amber-colored Listerine. Some people find that applying milk of magnesia to the scalp can be helpful.

We don't know if any of these would work when antifungal drugs have not, but they all are inexpensive and worth a try.

Q: I am curious about turmeric. I have osteoarthritis and read that turmeric might help joint pain.

I also am under a doctor's care for macular degeneration. As a result, I cannot take aspirin or blood thinners. Does turmeric thin the blood?

A: Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is characterized as "dry" or "wet," depending upon the stage of the disease and the abnormal growth of blood vessels that can leak at the back of the eye. Doctors advise against aspirin and anticoagulants for those with wet AMD to reduce the risk of bleeding inside the eye (Retina, November-December 2010).

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People's Pharmacy: Is mouth guard a health menace?

Student News

Published: Saturday, August 18, 2012 at 7:54 p.m. Last Modified: Saturday, August 18, 2012 at 7:54 p.m.

Three Auburndale High School students were honored by the Health Occupations Students of America. Shayla Jordan placed eighth in medical assisting, Morgan Faneuf placed seventh in dental science and Lori Hyde placed fourth in veterinarian science. The awards were given at the 35th annual National Leadership Conference held at Disney's Coronado Springs Resort in Orlando.

VANDERBILT UNIVERSITY

Leslie Schichtel from Lakeland graduated magna cum laude with a bachelor of arts degree in communications studies and English from Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tenn. She was initiated into Phi Beta Kappa on May 10. She works as a producer with NBC Olympics.

WORCESTER POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE

Alexander Misch of Bartow, a senior majoring in biomedical engineering, was named to the dean's list for academic excellence for the spring 2012 semester at Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Worcester, Mass.

AZUSA PACIFIC UNIVERSITY

Marjorie West of Haines City, a nursing major, made the academic dean's list at Azusa Pacific University, Azusa, Calif.

LAKE GIBSON MIDDLE SCHOOL

More than 6,700 members, advisers, alumni and guests of Family, Career and Community Leaders of America (FCCLA) gathered in Orlando July 8-12 for the National Leadership Conference. Throughout the year, FCCLA members tackle issues such as cyber-bullying prevention, traffic safety, family issues, career exploration, and much more.

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Student News

W. Volleyball. Annual Varsity/Alumni Match Set for Saturday

Aug. 17, 2012

FORT WORTH TCUs volleyball team opens the 2012 season Saturday when it hosts the annual Varsity/Alumni match inside the TCU University Rec Center. First serve is set for 1 p.m.

The Horned Frogs return eight letterwinners, including five starters, from last years squad that posted the second-most wins in TCU history with 25.

Highlighting the returners are Yvonne Igodan, Megan Munce and Stephanie Holland. Igodan, a junior, was named to the Preseason All-Big 12 team on Aug. 7. Munce is in her fifth year with the Frogs after gaining a medical redshirt following the 2012 season. A year ago, Holland was named the Mountain Wests top freshman.

TCU won 25 matches in 2011, including opening the season on a school-record 13-match winning streak. The 25 wins ran coach Prentice Lewis win total to 197 wins in her 10 seasons as the head coach of the Frogs.

Seventeen alumni players make up the Alumni team roster, with 10 committed to a playing capacity. Among the alumni are recent players Jordan Raines, Kourtney Edwards, Kristen Hester, Irene Hester and Katelyn Blackwood.

TCU opens its regular season Aug. 24 against Northern Colorado in Nashville for the Belmont Invitational. Its first match in Big 12 play is set for Sept. 22 at West Virginia.

#1 Katelyn Blackwood - 2006-09 *2009 All-Mountain West *2nd all-time at TCU in digs (1,334)

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W. Volleyball. Annual Varsity/Alumni Match Set for Saturday

Bishop Brossart trio enter medical school

ALEXANDRIA Donning the white coats of a doctor, three Bishop Brossart High School alumni have entered the same medical school class at the University of Louisville.

Jessica Baumann of Highland Heights, James Schack of California, and McKenzie Vater of Alexandria, joined the medical class of 2016 in a White Coat Ceremony at the University of Louisville School of Medicine Sunday, Aug. 5.

The three Bishop Brossart alumni are part of a class of 160 medical students seeking to complete four years of medical school. The three were among the members of the medical class selected from a pool of 3,200 applicants, according to a news release from Bishop Brossart. Of the 160 medical students selected, 120 were Kentucky residents.

This is an extremely proud moment in the lives of these three aspiring medical professionals and their families, as well as, an incredible tribute to our wonderful Bishop Brossart faculty and staff, said Ron Heiert, director of development for Bishop Brossart.

Bauman, the daughter of Larry and Jill Baumann of Highland Heights, is a 2006 Bishop Brossart graduate. Schack and Vater are 2008 Bishop Brossart graduates. Schack is the son of Jim and Milissa Schack of California, and Vater is the daughter of Jim and Carole Vater of Alexandria.

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Bishop Brossart trio enter medical school

10 Oneida High School grads, teachers to join inaugural Wall of Distinction

By CAITLIN TRAYNOR Dispatch Staff Writer Twitter.com/DispatchCaitlin

ONEIDA Ten Oneida High School graduates and retired teachers will be recognized for their achievements and community contributions Sept. 8 as the inaugural class of the Oneida City School District Foundations Wall of Distinction.

As a way to give back to a community that has given so much to it, Foundation Board Member Sue Tyler said it wants to recognize those who have distinguished themselves in their careers and their communities.

On Sept. 8 the foundation will host a dinner to recognize those individuals at the Kallet Civic Center at 6 p.m. Tickets are $25 and can be purchased by foundation board members, at the district office or at the Costello Sr.-Allen Eye Associates on Seneca Street. Proceeds from the dinner will be used to fund teacher grants and student scholarships. Tyler hopes that the Wall of Distinction will continue to be a fundraiser for the foundation in the future.

With a goal of inspiring students to be successful, Wall of Distinction nominees must have graduated from Oneida at least 10 years prior to their nomination and have exemplified the tenets of the OCSD educational philosophy throughout their lives. Teachers and employees must be retired for at least five years before being nominated.

Tyler hopes the Wall of Distinction, which is anticipated to be installed near the entrance of the Fariel Gym, will promote school and community pride and spirit.

The inaugural Wall of Distinction class includes:

Joseph Awad a 1972 graduate who is now a prominent lawyer in New York City and has served as the president of the New York State Law Association, as the governor of the American Association for Justice and many other organizations.

Peg Brown a retired physical education teacher from Oneida and now St. Patricks School principal; she has served as the chairwoman of the Central Area Association of Womens Physical Education of New York State and coached field hockey, basketball, softball and volleyball.

John Campanie a 1970 graduate who is now a prominent local attorney and the Madison County attorney, a past president of the Madison County Attorney Association and the Madison County Bar Association.

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10 Oneida High School grads, teachers to join inaugural Wall of Distinction

Major Textbook on Research Methodology Published

Newswise How do you teach medical research? How do you design a good study or develop a workable hypothesis? How do you shape research to improve patient care?

These and many more questions are addressed in an authoritative textbook detailing the clinical research process, written by researchers and clinicians at SUNY Downstate Medical Center and other institutions. Principles of Research Methodology: A Guide for Clinical Investigators, published by Springer, is designed to help healthcare professionals successfully conduct scientific research and also help them to better evaluate research published in the medical media.

We believe that this comprehensive book, which spans the entire research process and focuses on the critical role of the research hypothesis, will prove a unique resource to medical students, physicians, and translational scientists, among others, who typically lack formal broad training in research methodology and wish to expand their knowledge base, said Phyllis Supino, EdD, professor of medicine and public health, and director of clinical epidemiology and clinical research in the Division of Cardiovascular Medicine at SUNY Downstate.

Dr. Supino, who has many years of experience studying and teaching research methodology, is editor of the book, along with Jeffrey S. Borer, MD, chair of medicine and chief of cardiovascular medicine at SUNY Downstate. Dr. Borer is also director of The Howard Gilman Institute for Heart Valve Diseases and the Cardiovascular Translational Research Institute, both located at SUNY Downstate.

The text familiarizes the reader with the logic of research design and hypothesis construction, the importance of research planning, the ethical basis of human subjects research, the basics of writing a clinical research protocol and scientific paper, the logic and techniques of data generation and management, and the fundamentals and implications of various sampling techniques and alternative statistical methodologies.

Written by medical scientists and methodologists who have extensive experience in biomedical investigation and in teaching key aspects of research methodology to medical students, physicians and other health professionals, the text integrates theory with examples and employs language that is clear and useful for a general medical audience. Each of the 13 chapters ends with Take-Home Points summarizing key information.

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SUNY Downstate Medical Center, founded in 1860, was the first medical school in the United States to bring teaching out of the lecture hall and to the patients bedside. A center of innovation and excellence in research and clinical service delivery, SUNY Downstate Medical Center comprises a College of Medicine, Colleges of Nursing and Health Related Professions, a School of Graduate Studies, a School of Public Health, University Hospital of Brooklyn, and an Advanced Biotechnology Park and Biotechnology Incubator.

SUNY Downstate ranks eighth nationally in the number of alumni who are on the faculty of American medical schools. More physicians practicing in New York City have graduated from SUNY Downstate than from any other medical school.

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Major Textbook on Research Methodology Published

Man is charged in death of child

BEAVERDALE A 25-year-old man is charged with assaulting and killing a young girl he was baby-sitting Friday in his Blanche Street home.

Patrick Lynn Burkett of Beaverdale was arrested after 22-month-old Raegan Panick was taken to Memorial Medical Center in Johnstown and then transferred to Childrens Hospital of Pittsburgh with severe head and brain injuries.

State police say Burkett was watching Raegan while the childs mother was at work on Friday.

When the mother came home after 4:30 p.m., police say, she found the child was unresponsive. She had Burkett call for an ambulance.

Raegan was taken to Memorial Medical Center in Johnstown and then taken by helicopter to Childrens, where she was pronounced dead at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, the Allegheny County coroners office said.

Cause of death was blunt force trauma to the head.

Her manner of death was ruled a homicide.

Doctors at Childrens and at Memorial told police the babys injuries were consistent with an assault.

Dr. Clifford Neal at Memorial said she had bruising on her head, abdomen, upper thigh and groin area, according to the criminal complaint.

Dr. Jennifer Wolford at Childrens told police Raegan had a fractured skull, retinal hemorrhaging and a herniated brain.

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Man is charged in death of child

Four Kaiser Permanente Leaders Listed Among Diversity MBA Magazine’s Top 100 Under 50 List

OAKLAND, Calif., Aug. 13, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Four Kaiser Permanente leaders have been named to Diversity MBA Magazine's Top 100 Under 50 Diverse Executiveand Emerging Leaders list.

Nicole Barnett, assistant medical group administrator, and Anthony Barrueta, senior vice president of government relations, were recognized as Executive Leaders. L. Robert Garcia, director of finance communications and Sally Saba, MD, executive director of National Supplier Diversity, placed in the Emerging Leader category.

Diversity MBA Magazine, a quarterly publication that aims to serve the needs of multicultural professionals in corporate America, business students and entrepreneurs, will honor the Top 100 leaders in the publication's summer 2012 edition.

"We're pleased these four leaders have been recognized for their achievements and leadership within the organization and their communities," said George Halvorson, chairman and chief executive officer of Kaiser Permanente. "We're more successful as an organization when we leverage and learn from the different backgrounds and unique perspectives of our diverse workforce. We truly believe that diversity within our organization helps us better understand and meet the needs of our members."

"We are humbled by the success of our Top 100 Under 50 recognition program," says Pam McElvane, publisher and CEO of Diversity MBA Magazine. "We aspired to recognize high potential and seasoned executives for their outstanding leadership within their companies and communities.We believe that celebrating individuals that value higher education is a unique recognition in aligning leadership and education."

Awardees will be honored at Diversity MBA Magazine's sixth annual Business Leaders Forum and Awards Gala. The gala will be held Sept. 20-21 at the Palmer House Hilton Hotel in Chicago.

More information about Kaiser Permanente's honorees can be found below:

Nicole Barnett is assistant medical group administrator for Kaiser Permanente's East Bay Area, where she provides leadership to the departments of medical secretaries, medical legal, health education, eye care services, and clinic operations in Richmond, Pinole and Alameda, Calif.

Barnett participates in Kaiser Permanente's volunteer program, often facilitating local outreach efforts and recruiting volunteers from her facilities and departments. Under her leadership, the Kaiser Permanente Pinole (Calif.) Medical Office received the distinction of Business of the Year in 2011 for outreach efforts. Barnett serves as the leader of the Mount Calvary Baptist Church Health Ministry, which seeks to improve the health of members and the community through health education, screenings and connections to local health care resources.

Barnett earned her doctorate in health sciences from Nova Southeastern University in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. She currently is an adjunct professor of nursing at Dominican University in San Rafael, Calif. and has taught masters-level courses on Transitions in Nursing, Healthcare Policy and Healthcare Economics.

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Four Kaiser Permanente Leaders Listed Among Diversity MBA Magazine's Top 100 Under 50 List

CVS Pharmacy robber demands Oxycodone

Dust Storm in East Valley Dust Storm in East Valley

A monsoon dust storm moved into the East Valley, Mesa-Tempe area Saturday afternoon.Blowing dust and high winds can make driving hazardous this time of year, so please use caution while on the road.

A monsoon dust storm moved into the East Valley, Mesa-Tempe area Saturday afternoon.Blowing dust and high winds can make driving hazardous this time of year, so please use caution while on the road.

A few businesses near 43rd Avenue and Camelback were evacuated Saturday as a precaution after different pool chemicals accidentally mixed inside a truck trailer.

A few businesses near 43rd Avenue and Camelback were evacuated Saturday as a precaution after different pool chemicals accidentally mixed inside a truck trailer

They are one of the biggest rock bands in history, and certainly the most recognizable. Friday night, KISS mania took over the valley.

They are one of the biggest rock bands in history, and certainly the most recognizable. Friday night, KISS mania took over the valley.

Its monsoon season in the southwest, and in the summer, that means extreme rain, strong winds, and even thunder and lightning. But this phenomenon is now giving birth to another.

Its monsoon season in the southwest, and in the summer, that means extreme rain, strong winds, and even thunder and lightning. But this phenomenon is now giving birth to another.

ICE agents are searching for a woman they say filmed herself in pornographic videos with children.

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CVS Pharmacy robber demands Oxycodone

CMU adds two staff members in College of Medicine admissions office

MOUNT PLEASANT, MI The Central Michigan University College of Medicine added two staff members to admissions as student enrollment is underway.

Chris Austin is director of admissions and Jennifer Paulke is assistant director of admissions. They started earlier this month.

Austin, a CMU graduate, has worked at CMU since 1997 in admissions and alumni relations. His new job duties include recruiting students, managing the medical school admissions office and marketing.

Paulke, a Michigan native, comes from Florida Gulf Universitys College of Medicine where she was assistant director of admissions. At CMU, she will be responsible for recruitment and community involvement with schools in Michigan.

As assistant director of admissions, Paulke will be responsible for recruitment and community involvement particularly with the universities, colleges and school systems in Michigan. She will work with the director and the admissions staff in all aspects of medical student admissions.

CMU's medical school will open in 2013 with its first class of 60 students. The students will spend two years at the Mount Pleasant campus before beginning clinical training in Saginaw in Covenant HealthCare and St. Mary's of Michigan through CMU Healthcare, formerly Synergy Medical Education Alliance.

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CMU adds two staff members in College of Medicine admissions office