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Saturday, July 7, 2012

What you need to check the label of sunscreen

Here are some simple tips for selecting sunscreen and use of CNN:

-Use a sunscreen with a minimum SPF of 15 and a maximum of 50 SPF. SPF 15 can block 93% of UVB rays. SPF 30 blocks of 97%. SPF 50 blocks 98 per cent.

-Make sure the UVB protection list labels and grapes

You get exposed to UVA and UVB light:

(B) the UV light is the light that ballot box B(causes Burns)
UV light asa light that ges toskin (wrinkles, etc.)

-Avoid products containing oxybenzone and Retinyl palminate. They may get absorbed through the skin and can increase your risk of cancer

-Choose lotions versus spray sunscreens for a more uniform distribution

-Remember to apply at least 2 ounces of milk (about a full glass). Re-apply every 2 hours. Reapply after swimming or heavy sweating.

How to apply sunscreen-NHS video:

References:

Avoid sunscreens with potentially harmful ingredients, group warns. CNN, 2012.

How to avoid damaging ultraviolet light -CCJM launches "patient" page similar to JAMA

Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.


View the original article here

What you need to check the label of sunscreen

Here are some simple tips for selecting sunscreen and use of CNN:

-Use a sunscreen with a minimum SPF of 15 and a maximum of 50 SPF. SPF 15 can block 93% of UVB rays. SPF 30 blocks of 97%. SPF 50 blocks 98 per cent.

-Make sure the UVB protection list labels and grapes

You get exposed to UVA and UVB light:

(B) the UV light is the light that ballot box B(causes Burns)
UV light asa light that ges toskin (wrinkles, etc.)

-Avoid products containing oxybenzone and Retinyl palminate. They may get absorbed through the skin and can increase your risk of cancer

-Choose lotions versus spray sunscreens for a more uniform distribution

-Remember to apply at least 2 ounces of milk (about a full glass). Re-apply every 2 hours. Reapply after swimming or heavy sweating.

How to apply sunscreen-NHS video:

References:

Avoid sunscreens with potentially harmful ingredients, group warns. CNN, 2012.

How to avoid damaging ultraviolet light -CCJM launches "patient" page similar to JAMA

Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.


View the original article here

Intimidation Tactics? Prof demoted after criticizing university for PSA seminar

About 20 months ago, Dr. Michael Wilkes of UC-Davis and a colleague wrote an editorial in the San Francisco Chronicle, “PSA tests can cause more harm than good.”  He questioned his institution’s public event for men focusing on prostate cancer screening.  Excerpts of the editorial:

“Sadly, most men are never told the facts about the test, nor are they encouraged to make their own informed decision. The UC Davis course doesn’t even acknowledge a problem with prostate cancer screening. Its expert presenters – including two urologists and a professional football player (!) – will tell you that you need to “know your (PSA) statistics” beginning at age 40. …

We can’t say why UC Davis offers this course that ignore scientific evidence, but we wonder whether it just might have to do with money. Testing for and treating PSA-identified cancer is a large part of the practice of many urologists so it may not be surprising that urology groups take a far more positive stance on the test than almost any other doctors. They also fund a pro-PSA lobby that now includes the National Football League.

Health care spending is threatening to wreak greater and greater havoc on our economy. That’s not to say we shouldn’t invest in treatments that lead to improved health, even when they’re expensive.

And UC Davis, the NFL and surgical device companies have the right in our society to promote events in order to increase their profits. But we worry when companies and doctors with a conflict of interest sponsor what could be considered an infomercial endorsement to unsuspecting men without telling them they might end up being harmed as a result of a simple PSA blood test.”

Last week, InsideHigherEd.com reported that hours after that editorial was published, UC Davis administrators kicked off a series of steps to remove Wilkes from leadership positions he had held.  Excerpt:

Now, a committee on academic freedom at the university that investigated allegations of intimidation and harassment against Wilkes has found them to be true. The faculty committee said in its report, a copy of which was obtained by Inside Higher Ed, that the actions of the university administrators cast doubt on its ability to be a “truthful and accountable purveyor of knowledge and services.”

The group has asked the dean and other top officials at the university’s school of medicine to write letters of apology to the professor, admit to errors of judgment, stop proposed disciplinary actions against him and take steps to prevent future violations of academic freedom.

At the end of last week, the UC Davis Academic Senate Representative Assembly voted 52-0 to:

affirms the right of academic freedom of Professor Michael Wilkes and all other faculty to publish scholarly articles and professional expert commentaries that address ethics and societally relevant critiques.call upon the Dean, Executive Associate Dean, and the Health System Counsel of the School of Medicine of the University of California, Davis, all to:

1. Accept promptly and publicly responsibility for serious errors in judgment;
2. Write individual letters of apology to Professor Wilkes;
3. Rescind in writing all disciplinary actions that have been stated, proposed, or taken
against Professor Wilkes.

Also:

Resolved, That the Representative Assembly of the Davis Division of the Academic Senate expresses severe disapproval of the notion that the University of California may take legal action against professors whose scholarly publications or professional expert commentaries may be perceived by University administrators to be injurious to University interests.Resolved, That the Representative Assembly of the Davis Division of the Academic Senate calls upon the Chancellor of the University of California, Davis, within six months to:

1. Take concrete steps to prevent future violations of rights of academic freedom and
report to the Davis Division the steps that have been taken to this end.
2. Have the Dean of the School of Medicine take appropriate training to prevent
academic freedom violations.

Finally, in a 50-0 vote, the Assembly added a resolution:

That the Representative Assembly condemns Health System and Campus Legal Counsels for drafting inappropriate and apparently threatening letters that violated a faculty member’s right to academic freedom.



View the original article here

Intimidation Tactics? Prof demoted after criticizing university for PSA seminar

About 20 months ago, Dr. Michael Wilkes of UC-Davis and a colleague wrote an editorial in the San Francisco Chronicle, “PSA tests can cause more harm than good.”  He questioned his institution’s public event for men focusing on prostate cancer screening.  Excerpts of the editorial:

“Sadly, most men are never told the facts about the test, nor are they encouraged to make their own informed decision. The UC Davis course doesn’t even acknowledge a problem with prostate cancer screening. Its expert presenters – including two urologists and a professional football player (!) – will tell you that you need to “know your (PSA) statistics” beginning at age 40. …

We can’t say why UC Davis offers this course that ignore scientific evidence, but we wonder whether it just might have to do with money. Testing for and treating PSA-identified cancer is a large part of the practice of many urologists so it may not be surprising that urology groups take a far more positive stance on the test than almost any other doctors. They also fund a pro-PSA lobby that now includes the National Football League.

Health care spending is threatening to wreak greater and greater havoc on our economy. That’s not to say we shouldn’t invest in treatments that lead to improved health, even when they’re expensive.

And UC Davis, the NFL and surgical device companies have the right in our society to promote events in order to increase their profits. But we worry when companies and doctors with a conflict of interest sponsor what could be considered an infomercial endorsement to unsuspecting men without telling them they might end up being harmed as a result of a simple PSA blood test.”

Last week, InsideHigherEd.com reported that hours after that editorial was published, UC Davis administrators kicked off a series of steps to remove Wilkes from leadership positions he had held.  Excerpt:

Now, a committee on academic freedom at the university that investigated allegations of intimidation and harassment against Wilkes has found them to be true. The faculty committee said in its report, a copy of which was obtained by Inside Higher Ed, that the actions of the university administrators cast doubt on its ability to be a “truthful and accountable purveyor of knowledge and services.”

The group has asked the dean and other top officials at the university’s school of medicine to write letters of apology to the professor, admit to errors of judgment, stop proposed disciplinary actions against him and take steps to prevent future violations of academic freedom.

At the end of last week, the UC Davis Academic Senate Representative Assembly voted 52-0 to:

affirms the right of academic freedom of Professor Michael Wilkes and all other faculty to publish scholarly articles and professional expert commentaries that address ethics and societally relevant critiques.call upon the Dean, Executive Associate Dean, and the Health System Counsel of the School of Medicine of the University of California, Davis, all to:

1. Accept promptly and publicly responsibility for serious errors in judgment;
2. Write individual letters of apology to Professor Wilkes;
3. Rescind in writing all disciplinary actions that have been stated, proposed, or taken
against Professor Wilkes.

Also:

Resolved, That the Representative Assembly of the Davis Division of the Academic Senate expresses severe disapproval of the notion that the University of California may take legal action against professors whose scholarly publications or professional expert commentaries may be perceived by University administrators to be injurious to University interests.Resolved, That the Representative Assembly of the Davis Division of the Academic Senate calls upon the Chancellor of the University of California, Davis, within six months to:

1. Take concrete steps to prevent future violations of rights of academic freedom and
report to the Davis Division the steps that have been taken to this end.
2. Have the Dean of the School of Medicine take appropriate training to prevent
academic freedom violations.

Finally, in a 50-0 vote, the Assembly added a resolution:

That the Representative Assembly condemns Health System and Campus Legal Counsels for drafting inappropriate and apparently threatening letters that violated a faculty member’s right to academic freedom.



View the original article here

Examples of medical marketing for the week: full body skin cancer scans, robotic hysterectomy

Both of these were sent to me by journalists:

An email pitch letter from a medical group:

Medical Office has First Full Body Scanner to Protect Against Skin Cancer

Dear xxxxx,

We thought that this might make for a very interesting and informative article. With the approach of summer break, this is a time when most people head outdoors. It’s important for people to remember to protect their families against one of the most common forms of cancer today: skin cancer. Current statistics show that 1 in 5 Americans will develop skin cancer in their lifetime.

—- uses the latest technology to detect and protect against skin cancer. They are the only practice in central (could be any state) to offer this system which creates a digital map of the entire body.

Now let’s look at the evidence:  The US Preventive Services Task Force states that “the current evidence is insufficient to assess the balance of benefits and harms of using a whole-body skin examination by a primary care clinician or patient skin self-examination for the early detection of cutaneous melanoma, basal cell cancer, or squamous cell skin cancer in the adult general population.”

The other example came from a journalist who wrote, “Doesn’t it seem particularly exploitative to use a 26-year-old woman’s hysterectomy for this?” The news release/pitch:

Surgeons at xxx Health Center have completed the first robot-assisted surgery in xxxx County.

The first patient was 26-year-old xxx, who underwent a robot-assisted hysterectomy April 13.

Hysterectomies and other gynecological procedures are the first of many robot-assisted surgical procedures that will be offered at xxx.

“We are proud to offer the most high-tech, minimally invasive treatment options available anywhere right here at xxx. Now our patients can benefit from the latest surgical technologies without leaving home,” says (the) president of xxx Health Center.

For advertising disguised as news, see this puff piece in the business section of The Tennessean online, “daVinci robot works miracles.” 

Addendum 5 hours later:  The Nashville Scene website reports, “Tennessean Farms Out Health Section to Hospital Flacks.“  And Paul Raeburn of the Knight Science Journalism Tracker writes:

“The changes come as the Tennessean institutes a paywall for many of its stories. (Newspaper management) said that because of the paywall, “The Tennessean will continue its mission of serving Middle Tennesseans for years to come.”

With regard to some things, maybe. But not with regard to health news. The paper has already failed in that mission.”

Finally, for absurdity in robot hype, see a Seattle doc’s You Tube video of how he used a robotic surgical system to fold a paper airplane – and see how the blogger known as The Skeptical Scalpel grounds that hype.


View the original article here

Examples of medical marketing for the week: full body skin cancer scans, robotic hysterectomy

Both of these were sent to me by journalists:

An email pitch letter from a medical group:

Medical Office has First Full Body Scanner to Protect Against Skin Cancer

Dear xxxxx,

We thought that this might make for a very interesting and informative article. With the approach of summer break, this is a time when most people head outdoors. It’s important for people to remember to protect their families against one of the most common forms of cancer today: skin cancer. Current statistics show that 1 in 5 Americans will develop skin cancer in their lifetime.

—- uses the latest technology to detect and protect against skin cancer. They are the only practice in central (could be any state) to offer this system which creates a digital map of the entire body.

Now let’s look at the evidence:  The US Preventive Services Task Force states that “the current evidence is insufficient to assess the balance of benefits and harms of using a whole-body skin examination by a primary care clinician or patient skin self-examination for the early detection of cutaneous melanoma, basal cell cancer, or squamous cell skin cancer in the adult general population.”

The other example came from a journalist who wrote, “Doesn’t it seem particularly exploitative to use a 26-year-old woman’s hysterectomy for this?” The news release/pitch:

Surgeons at xxx Health Center have completed the first robot-assisted surgery in xxxx County.

The first patient was 26-year-old xxx, who underwent a robot-assisted hysterectomy April 13.

Hysterectomies and other gynecological procedures are the first of many robot-assisted surgical procedures that will be offered at xxx.

“We are proud to offer the most high-tech, minimally invasive treatment options available anywhere right here at xxx. Now our patients can benefit from the latest surgical technologies without leaving home,” says (the) president of xxx Health Center.

For advertising disguised as news, see this puff piece in the business section of The Tennessean online, “daVinci robot works miracles.” 

Addendum 5 hours later:  The Nashville Scene website reports, “Tennessean Farms Out Health Section to Hospital Flacks.“  And Paul Raeburn of the Knight Science Journalism Tracker writes:

“The changes come as the Tennessean institutes a paywall for many of its stories. (Newspaper management) said that because of the paywall, “The Tennessean will continue its mission of serving Middle Tennesseans for years to come.”

With regard to some things, maybe. But not with regard to health news. The paper has already failed in that mission.”

Finally, for absurdity in robot hype, see a Seattle doc’s You Tube video of how he used a robotic surgical system to fold a paper airplane – and see how the blogger known as The Skeptical Scalpel grounds that hype.


View the original article here

3-part series on disease-mongering

There are so many ways a story about seaweed for weight loss could have been hyped.  This story, though, artfully dodged all of those ways, stuck to the evidence, and gave a thorough report. Interesting sidenote:  written by an intern.  Off to a great start!


View the original article here

3-part series on disease-mongering

There are so many ways a story about seaweed for weight loss could have been hyped.  This story, though, artfully dodged all of those ways, stuck to the evidence, and gave a thorough report. Interesting sidenote:  written by an intern.  Off to a great start!


View the original article here

Top articles in medicine in May 2012

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota
Here are my suggestions for some of the top articles in medicine in May 2012 so far:

Point-of-care genetic testing for personalisation of antiplatelet treatment is effective http://goo.gl/ZWLvz

Patient empowerment - who empowers whom? Virtually all people are patients at some point in their lives http://goo.gl/4YKjq

Doctors' love-hate relationship with EHRs http://goo.gl/wd74F

Why U.S. spends more on healthcare than other developed countries: Higher prices, readily accessible technology, obesity http://goo.gl/cid6S

Austerely law transforms Spain’s health system from universal access to one based on employment | BMJ http://goo.gl/36u4C

Bevacizumab (Avastin) is as effective as ranibizumab (Lucentis) for wet AMD and could save NHS millions - NHS http://goo.gl/JJ8uV

Having 'Type D' Personality - a distressed and pessimistic outlook on life - May Affect Your Health http://goo.gl/kFbpA

New Cautions About Bisphosphonate Use - NYTimes http://goo.gl/PYiKy

How to Create Your Own Website using Blogger - Step-by-Step Guide for Physicians http://goo.gl/tCd37

Truvada (Emtriva + Viread), first drug to prevent HIV infection in healthy people at high risk (MSM, partners of HIV+) http://goo.gl/e1MJM

Can mobile phones give you brain cancer? The verdict's still on hold http://goo.gl/gI6Ta

Drink Water to Improve Test Scores http://goo.gl/MNB6k and http://goo.gl/EO12p

The articles were selected from my Twitter and Google Reader streams.


View the original article here

Top articles in medicine in May 2012

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota
Here are my suggestions for some of the top articles in medicine in May 2012 so far:

Point-of-care genetic testing for personalisation of antiplatelet treatment is effective http://goo.gl/ZWLvz

Patient empowerment - who empowers whom? Virtually all people are patients at some point in their lives http://goo.gl/4YKjq

Doctors' love-hate relationship with EHRs http://goo.gl/wd74F

Why U.S. spends more on healthcare than other developed countries: Higher prices, readily accessible technology, obesity http://goo.gl/cid6S

Austerely law transforms Spain’s health system from universal access to one based on employment | BMJ http://goo.gl/36u4C

Bevacizumab (Avastin) is as effective as ranibizumab (Lucentis) for wet AMD and could save NHS millions - NHS http://goo.gl/JJ8uV

Having 'Type D' Personality - a distressed and pessimistic outlook on life - May Affect Your Health http://goo.gl/kFbpA

New Cautions About Bisphosphonate Use - NYTimes http://goo.gl/PYiKy

How to Create Your Own Website using Blogger - Step-by-Step Guide for Physicians http://goo.gl/tCd37

Truvada (Emtriva + Viread), first drug to prevent HIV infection in healthy people at high risk (MSM, partners of HIV+) http://goo.gl/e1MJM

Can mobile phones give you brain cancer? The verdict's still on hold http://goo.gl/gI6Ta

Drink Water to Improve Test Scores http://goo.gl/MNB6k and http://goo.gl/EO12p

The articles were selected from my Twitter and Google Reader streams.


View the original article here

Windows 8?? it only would cost $ 40




Announced in the initial Microsoft executives Mike Angiulo (left) and Steven Sinofsky Windows 8 version Microsoft build Conference.
New York (CNNMoney) –-If you are considering upgrading to Windows 8 this fall, Microsoft only make so much cheaper option.
Software giant announced Monday that running any Windows XP or newer versions can upgrade $ 40 just to Windows 8 Pro.
It's what is considerably less than the price Microsoft typically customers update operating system. For example, "" will cost a $ 120 Microsoft run the Windows 7 upgrade version of Windows previous editions online store. But from one set to another Windows 7 version is at least $ 65 back to upgrade.
Microsoft (MSFT, Fortune 500) until the end of the 1/2013, rather then $ 40 promotional rates upgrade fee, users download Windows 8 via the Internet. Through promotion of $ 70 available in DVD version store.
What company did not say about the availability or price of Windows 8.
Savings also worked a new OS pricing for biggest competitor in the Windows. Apple (AAPL, Fortune 500) just $ 29 last upgrade the version of Mac OS X on sale this month called the latest updates when the mountain lion, the company just charged $ 20.
Almost 85% of the Mac, the latest Mac OS 10.7 (Lion) or earlier versions of Mac OS 10.6 (Snow Leopard) Internet applications are run according to.
Rapidly Microsoft customers do not match the spread. There is still almost half of the Windows Pc running the 11-year-old Windows XP.
Aging PC brand new version of Windows upgrade is usually bad idea-infamous Windows resource hog-Windows 8 exceptions can be. It's fast is the most recent trimmest, all Microsoft Windows releases.
Testing Committee outside the Dell Latitude laptop 5 years design for CNNMoney eight Windows Windows XP. Start in 16 seconds and load smoothly ran a general application.
Urge adoption of Microsoft Windows 8 customer motivation there.
Started eating to many PC sales Windows 8 operating system including the tablet form factor--to give the ability to adapt is optimized for the touch screen. When announced a tablet of its own surface last month Microsoft released Windows 8 debut.
However, the critical mass of users is a main concern of the Microsoft new apps to thrive.
Layout features the Tablet style called new versions of applications available in the app store of the Microsoft new operating system stands out only run "Metro" and runs some version of Windows 8 traditional Windows applications. The product is nowhere near most of the major applications, Microsoft cover, Apple and Google smart 100000 is a Tablet and Smartphone applications.
Until more applications are available chicken and egg problem-want your device up to millions of users are not to spend hours creating devices app developer-wash. working on both issues.
Has it is trying to ??? developer contest, revenue-sharing terms and other food. Now, so far, customer offers upgrade to Windows it has minimum aims to price, drawing.
Also some of your Windows 8 can can get cheaper. Running on the website can get a guest Windows 8 Pro upgrade $ 15 buy Windows 7 PC 6/2/2012 and 2013 ? 1 ? 31 ?, under the promotion of another company.
Such promotion of Windows when the latest version is abolished typical is. Tokio Marine is planning to launch Windows 8 is Windows 7 sales, offer upgrades at a discounted rate like this will likely keep the holiday.To top of page

Salba Smart – Smarter Chia Seeds




I’m making an effort to be healthier (although I have given up the vegan diet – for the most part). Two things that I really need to integrate into my diet is more fiber and Omega-3s – both of which help reduce cholesterol. Chia seeds, which I’ve recently started reading about, include both fiber and Omega-3s. Salba Smart, a company that makes organically grown and non-GMO chia, sent me some samples of their products, and I’ve integrated them into my diet over the past six weeks.
Salba Smart makes chips and salsa as well as ground and whole chia seeds. The prepared products are wonderful – they taste great and are healthy. But, my favorites are the seeds, because I can then add them directly to my food. I’ve added them to water, or to my granola in the morning. They also work well as an egg substitute in recipes, and sprinkled onto yogurt, smoothies, and fruit. It’s an extra step, but it’s so worth it. According to their website, Salba chia, gram for gram, has:
8 x more Omega-3 (ALA) than Atlantic Salmon (EPA/DHA)2.8 x more antioxidants than pomegranates (based on ORAC values)6 x more calcium than whole milk3 x more iron than spinach15 x more magnesium than broccoli3 x more fiber than oats All of those great benefits are definitely worth the extra step – and the seeds don’t have a taste, so they are easy to integrate into your food.
To learn more about Salba Smart, visit their website.
Disclosure: I received complimentary samples for review.
Tagged as: healthy food

Tea Time: 10 Proper Spots to Celebrate the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee

r the quota Tea at the Chesterfield Mayfair

There’s really nothing more English than afternoon tea, and so in honor of the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee this June, we’ve rounded up some of our favorite spots to indulge — in London and the Commonwealth.
We found scones, clotted cream, and smoked salmon finger sandwiches, of course, but a few surprises as well — from poetry tea readings to a tea inspired by the royal jewels.
Pinkies up, please!

Tagged as: Barbados, Jamaica, London, St. Lucia 

Alaska man treated for flesh-eating infection

AppId is over the quota AppId is over the quota ANCHORAGE, Alaska — A man from Juneau, Alaska, contracted a rare infection from flesh-eating bacteria and was in satisfactory condition in a Seattle hospital after being flown in for emergency treatment, hospital officials said on Thursday.

Don't miss these Health stories After fighting for her life, mom finally gets to hold new baby After suffering a burst blood vessel in her brain while 38 weeks pregnant, Amber Scott was rushed to the hospital for an emergency C-section followed by brain surgery. After weeks of drifting in and out of consciousness, the new mom finally held her baby for the first time.
Love really can grow from lust, study says Something not so tasty in your barbecue -- brush debris The strange reason diet soda makes you fat Science cracks the code of what makes us cool Ruben Pereyra was the latest person in the United States to suffer the flesh-eating disease that has also afflicted a Georgia graduate student who has had to undergo multiple amputations and a South Carolina woman who is a new mother of twins.
Pereyra arrived two weeks ago at Seattle's Harborview Medical Center from a Juneau hospital, Harborview spokeswoman Clare LeFond said.
Hospital officials did not give details about the extent, severity or circumstances of the case. But in an interview with the Juneau Empire newspaper, Pereyra's wife, Ana, said her husband apparently got the infection from a splinter in his hand.
She also told the paper that her husband had surgery and that an amputation was possible.
Necrotizing fasciitis, otherwise known as flesh-eating disease, can be caused when a wound is infected with group-A streptococci or by staphylococci, common bacteria that live on people's skin and in their noses.
Jim Strader, director of community relations for Juneau's Bartlett Regional Hospital, said he and other hospital officials in the Alaska capital had been assuring the public the disease was not communicable, he said.
"It's not an epidemic. It's not a reason to panic," he said, adding: "It's fortunately very rare. But it has a really high mortality rate."
The infection progresses rapidly and can quickly destroy muscles, skin and other tissues. "The wound sometimes looks like it's healed over, and then it comes back very, very quickly," Strader said

After fighting for his life, holds mom finally newborn


Tommy Scott was not worried when his pregnant wife called to tell him she thought she was on the road with a migraine. But when he came home from work, Tommy found amber, 38 weeks pregnant, laying in their bedroom do not react with one eye open and the other closed, Moaning and vomiting.
"Rush of course everything through your head," Tommy told today's Natalie Morales. "I phoned 911 right away and the ambulance was there within 10 minutes and we were at the hospital right away. But it was crazy. "
Doctors determined that the 29-year-old Amber had a ruptured blood vessel in his brain — a condition that occurs in approximately six out of every 100,000 pregnancies.
Surgeons elected to deliver her baby by C-section, and then to operate on Amber's brain.
Initially, everything seemed fine as Amber started to come out of the anesthesia. But then things took a frightening turn and she was once again responding. Realizing that the Ambers brain had started to swell rapidly, doctors removed part of her skull to protect her brain from being crushed against the bone.
A month later, Amber woke up, but was not well enough to talk himself. All the while watching her family visited regularly, showing Amber photos of baby, Adeline, she had yet to hold or even.
"We wanted to let her know the baby was okay," Tommy told today. "Since day one we have shows her images."She started to smile a little. She always smiles now. "
On Sunday, for the first time got Amber to keep her baby and begin to care for her.
"She kept the bottle and fed her," Tommy told today. "She needs a little assistance, but the most important part, she grabbed the bottle and went right into the mouth. She knows what is going on. For the first time, smiled Adeline also. "
Amber is still got a long way to go. Doctors predict she will be in intensive rehab for weeks working to regain speech and motor skills.
But they say are positive signs.
"She now communicates with us," said Dr. Andrea Toomer, a doctor at West Jefferson Medical Center, just outside New Orleans, today. "She can tell us what she needs and what she wants, what Bothers her. She is able to ask questions about what is going on. "
It is enough for a start to Amber's mom.
"The fact that she witness Adeline now that she recognizes her, that makes me feel better," said Laura Rabalais today.
For Tommy, who had been looking forward to the day when he and his wife would be parents, it has been "bittersweet."
"Of course you satisfied," he told Morales. "I am happy that I am a father now. But of course I will be with yellow all the time, too.
"Amber was so excited for the last nine months. Her whole life, everything revolved around making sure everything was prepared for Adeline. It is so sad. But we try to include Amber in everything we can. We always tell her daily activities. We do our best to keep her informed. "
Tommy takes hope from the speed of Ambers progress so far.
"I never would have thought that we would be this much sooner, compared to where we were we first started," he told today. "She has motivation to get better, and I believe she will definitively".

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