All posts by blackfriar

Social app puts bad habits to good use

Interesting, generalised, socially-mediated swear jar… another interesting addition to the habit-breaking arsenal…

Social app puts bad habits to good use

Social Rehub collects money every time users swear, or commit any other bad habit decided by their friends.

 

Bad habits are not only detrimental to the people that are chained to them, but can also be annoying for others. Acting as a digital swear jar, a new app from Romania — Social Rehub — collects money every time users blaspheme, or commit any other bad habit decided by their friends.
Multiple users can set up their own group of friends or colleagues who participate in the tip jar. Each individual can then be assigned a bad habit their friends get annoyed by — whether it’s swearing, smoking, biting fingernails or being late. Every time a friend catches a user transgressing, their tally goes up and they must pay the amount set by the group. The app also enables friends to snap a photo of the incident as proof. The collected money can then either be used to fund group nights out or sent to charity.

oleaginous

Simon Chapman (Medical Observer, 5 November, 2013):

“Big Tobacco is not investing in e-cigarettes to wean itself off cigarette sales,” he says.

“Its recent oleaginous rhetoric about them saving lives is utter duplicity. As with other forms of smokeless tobacco, Big Tobacco wants smokers to use e-cigarettes as well as cigarettes, not instead of them.

“Urged on by myopic health professionals who seem to have lost any population health focus they might have had, this may become one of the biggest blunders of modern public health.”

oleaginous
adjective
  1. 1.
    rich in, covered with, or producing oil; oily.
    “fabrics would quickly become filthy in this oleaginous kingdom”
  2. 2.
    exaggeratedly and distastefully complimentary; obsequious.
    “candidates made oleaginous speeches praising government policies”

“The best minds of my generation are thinking about how to make people click ads… That sucks.” Jeff Hammerbacher

“After a couple years at Facebook, Jeff Hammerbacher grew restless. He figured that much of the groundbreaking computer science had been done. Something else gnawed at him. Hammerbacher looked around Silicon Valley at companies like his own, Google (GOOG), and Twitter, and saw his peers wasting their talents. “The best minds of my generation are thinking about how to make people click ads,” he says. “That sucks.” (…)

“Any generation of smart people will be drawn to where the money is, and right now it’s the ad generation,” says Steve Perlman, a Silicon Valley entrepreneur who once sold WebTV to Microsoft for $425 million and is now running OnLive, an online video game service. ” (…)

Hammerbacher: “If instead of pointing their incredible infrastructure at making people click on ads,” he likes to ask, “they pointed it at great unsolved problems in science, how would the world be different today?”

— Jeff Hammerbacher, founder and the Chief Scientist of Cloudera, one of Facebook’s first 100 employees, cited in Ashlee VanceThis Tech Bubble Is Different, Bloomberg BusinessWeek, April 14, 2011

Weltschmerz

Weltschmerz (from the German, meaning world-pain or world-wearinesspronounced [ˈvɛltʃmɛɐ̯ts]) is a term coined by the German author Jean Paul Richter and denotes the kind of feeling experienced by someone who understands that physical reality can never satisfy the demands of the mind. This kind of world view was widespread among several romantic authors such as Lord ByronGiacomo LeopardiFrançois-René de ChateaubriandAlfred de MussetNikolaus LenauHermann Hesse, and Heinrich Heine. It is also used to denote the feeling of sadness when thinking about the evils of the world.

The modern meaning of Weltschmerz in the German language is the psychological pain caused by sadness that can occur when realizing that someone’s own weaknesses are caused by the inappropriateness and cruelty of the world and (physical and social) circumstances. Weltschmerz in this meaning can cause depressionresignation and escapism, and can become a mental problem (compare to Hikikomori). The modern meaning should also be compared with the concept of anomie, or a kind of alienation, that Émile Durkheimwrote about in his sociological treatise Suicide.

From: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weltschmerz

The gist of my concerns…

Post-change makers festival closing event, here’s a first go at capturing my main beefs with the health system – a little rough around the edges but captures the gist:

 

  Appearance Reality Vision
Mission Brittle health system Bankrupt sickness market Sustainable learning wellness market
Universality Universal healthcare Safety net + PHI Universal
Payment Fee for care Fee for activity Fee for outcomes
Leadership Run by experts Run by amateurs Run by the finest minds
Levers Doctors in hospitals prescribing pharmaceuticals and performing procedures Unmanaged social determinants with doctors spruiking pills and procedures Actively managed social determinants featuring broccoli magnates

That said, and given the issues and concerns we discussed, I suspect some (if not all) of what needs to happen, has to happen alongside or entirely outside the existing system. Hmm.

I just returned from the closing event for this: http://changemakersfestival.org/

I didn’t have a chance to properly speak with Jenny about our discussion, but got the impression that there simply wasn’t the kind of support for think tanks here that existed overseas.

That said, I did have a reasonable chat with Nicholas Gruen – an very interesting economist and thinker – and suspect there may be an alternate angle to pursue… will keep you posted.

What REALLY Kills Us

Terrific Daniel Katz piece on LinkedIn on the actual causes of death.

Heart disease, cancer, stroke and diabetes are not causes, they are diseases.

The 1993 JAMA article “Actual Causes of Death” lays it out, and the top three causes of premature death, which account for 80% of the risk, are:

  1. tobacco
  2. diet
  3. exercise

Population-based research published in 2009 showed that people who ate well, exercise routinely, avoided tobacco, and controlled their weight had an 80% lower probability across their entire life span of developing ANY major chronic disease- heart disease, cancer, stroke, diabetes, dementia, etc.- than those who smoked, ate badly, didn’t exercise, and lost control of their weight

 http://www.linkedin.com/today/post/article/20131110133420-23027997-what-really-kills-us

What REALLY Kills Us

Heart disease is not the leading cause of death among men and women in the United States. Cancer, stroke, pulmonary disease, diabetes, and dementia are not the other leading causes of early mortality and/or chronic malady either.

Don’t get me wrong- these are the very diseases immediately responsible for an enormous loss of years from life, and an even greater loss of life from years. In that context, heart disease is indeed the most common immediate precipitant of early death among women and men alike. Cancer, stroke, and diabetes do indeed follow close behind. It’s just that these diseases aren’t really causes. They are effects.

We got this message loud, clear, and first- at least in the modern era- in what really should have been a culture-changing research paper published in JAMA in 1993 entitled ‘Actual Causes of Death in the United States.’ In that analysis, two leading epidemiologists, Drs. William Foege and J. Michael McGinnis, looked into the factors that accounted for the chronic diseases and other insults that immediately preceded premature deaths. When they were done crunching numbers, they had a list of ten factors that accounted for almost all of the premature deaths in our country every year.

Let’s digress to note we cannot ‘prevent’ death. But what makes death tragic is not that it happens- we are all mortal- but that it happens too soon. And even worse, that it happens after a long period of illness drains away vitality, capacity, and the pleasure of living. Chronic disease can produce a long, lingering twilight of quasi-living, before adding to that injury the insult of a premature death. And that, we can prevent. We can preserve vitality, and we can postpone death to its rightful time, at the end of our full life expectancy.

Now back to our regularly scheduled program. There were two astounding things about McGinnis and Foege’s list of ten factors*. First, we as individuals have substantial control over everything on the list, and virtually complete control over most of the entries. Second, just the first three factors on the list – tobacco, diet, and physical activity – accounted for fully 80% of the action. In other words, the actual, underlying “cause” of premature death in our country fully 8 times in 10 comes down to bad use of our feet (lack of physical activity), our forks (poor dietary choices), and/or our fingers (holding cigarettes).

I trust you immediately see the up-side to this. If bad use of feet, forks, and fingers accounts for 80% of premature deaths (and a bounty of chronic disease), it stands to reason that optimal use of feet, forks, and fingers could eliminate up to 80% of all premature mortality and chronic illness. This proves to be exactly true. Feet, forks, and fingers are the master levers of medical destiny.

We know this not just from McGinnis and Foege’s seminal paper, but from a steady drumbeat of corroborating research spanning the two decades since. Scientists at the CDC replicated the findings in the original paper in an update a decade later. Population-based research published in 2009 showed that people who ate well, exercise routinely, avoided tobacco, and controlled their weight had an 80% lower probability across their entire life span of developing ANY major chronic disease- heart disease, cancer, stroke, diabetes, dementia, etc.- than those who smoked, ate badly, didn’t exercise, and lost control of their weight. Flip the switch on any of these factors from bad to good, and the lifetime risk of serious chronic disease was reduced by nearly 50%. But firing on all four cylinders produced a greater net benefit than perhaps any advance in the history of medicine. These very findings have been replicated again, and again– and have been shown to extend that same influence over the expression of our very genes. DNA is not destiny, and to a substantial extent- dinner is. By changing what we eat and how we live, we can alter the expression of our very genes in a way that immunizes us against chronic disease occurrence, recurrence, or progression.

And so it is we have the knowledge to eliminate fully 80% of all chronic disease and premature death. The contention isn’t even controversial.

But knowledge, alas, isn’t power unless it is put to use. And for the most part, we have not leveraged the astounding memo we first got in 1993. Not only have we failed to slash rates of chronic disease, we are actually seeing them rise- with onset at ever-younger ages. We could bequeath to our children a world in which 8 times in 10, heart attacks and strokes and cancer simply don’t happen. Instead, should current trends persist, we will bequeath to them a world in which they and their peers succumb to just such preventable calamities more often and earlier than we.

So current trends cannot persist- and that, bluntly, is why I wrote Disease Proof. As a society, we clearly know the ‘what,’ but as individuals and families; spouses and siblings; parents and grandparents- most of us, just as clearly, don’t know how. How, despite the challenges of modern living, do we adopt, maintain, and enjoy a healthful diet? How, despite those same challenges, do we fit fitness in? How do we navigate around other challenges, from sleep deprivation and lack of energy, to overwhelming stress, to chronic pain?

These questions have answers, and I know them. I know them not because I’m special, but because it’s my job to know them. Pilots know how to fly planes; nuclear physicists know how to split atoms. I am a health expert, and I know how to get to health and weight control from here. Like any worthwhile thing, it requires a skill set- but we are used to that. We had to learn how to read and ride our bikes. We had to learn how to drive our cars and use our smart phones. Every worthwhile undertaking in our lives has involved someone who already knew how teaching us. Our job was to learn, and apply.

Health and weight control are exactly the same. In Disease Proof, I share the full skill set I apply myself.

We could, as a culture, eliminate 80% of all chronic disease. But my family and yours cannot afford to keep on waitin’ on the world to change. By taking matters into our own hands, we can lose weight and find health right now. We can reduce our personal risk of chronic disease, and that of the people we love, by that very same 80%. We can make our lives not just longer, but better.

What really kills us prematurely, and all too often imposes years of misery before hand, isn’t a list of chronic diseases, but the factors that cause those diseases. What really takes years from life and life from years is a willingness to know WHAT, yet neglect the opportunity to know HOW. What really kills us is the failure to turn what we know and have long known, into what we do. We can change that, and substantially disease-proof ourselves and those we love, any time we’re ready. I hope that’s now, because waiting- is really killing us.

-fin

DISEASE PROOF is available in bookstores nationwide and at:

Dr. David L. Katz; www.davidkatzmd.com
www.turnthetidefoundation.org

http://www.facebook.com/pages/Dr-David-L-Katz/114690721876253
http://twitter.com/DrDavidKatz
http://www.linkedin.com/pub/david-l-katz-md-mph/7/866/479/

 

*the list is: tobacco, diet and activity patterns, alcohol, microbial agents, toxic agents, firearms, sexual behavior, motor vehicles, and illicit use of drugs

self-limiting repulsion

Over time, humanity has demonstrated a increasing tendency toward the repulsive.

Is it possible that humanity might repulse itself so much that begins to impact on population growth?

Could this be the root cause of plummeting birth rates in developed economies?