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Archive for March, 2008

Police Motorcycle Camera Proves the Need to “Move Over”

Thursday, March 20th, 2008

Last November a member of the Hillsboro Oregon Police Department was on a routine traffic stop when he nearly lost his life in an accident, and the whole thing was recorded by the camera on his motorcycle.

The video shows Officer Clint Chrz standing next to a vehicle, talking to the driver on the shoulder of the Pacific Highway. Out of nowhere you see his motorcycle come flying into him. A drunk driver had hit his motorcycle and which then rammed into the the officer. The force of the car crash threw him into the middle of the highway. Luckily another car on the highway saw him lying there and pulled his vehicle up to protect him from on-coming traffic. Whether his helmet saved his life, we will never know, but the officer suffered only cuts, bruises and a concussion.

It is because of accidents like that of Officer Chrz that 43 states, including Florida, have enacted the “Move Over” law. It requires drivers to slow down when approaching emergency vehicles and give them the amount of room they need to do their job without getting hit by on-coming traffic.

Surgeon Removes Healthy Kidney

Thursday, March 20th, 2008

A surgeon in Minnesota left a cancerous kidney in a patient and instead removed a healthy one. The doctor has promised to stop practicing medicine after his horrible mistake was revealed a day later by pathology reports. Surgeons will now have to double check CAT scans and MRI’s before beginning surgery. There is no word on how the patient is doing, or whether he will need a kidney transplant to survive. Most people can live with only one kidney, and now that his healthy one is gone, he might need such a transplant. Therefore, the doctor’s mistake has affected not just one person, but perhaps two since that kidney could have gone to someone else. It is also interesting to consider the recourses this patient would be left with in Florida, where one size fits all medical malpractice claims would limit his recovery for his suffering due to this shocking mistake.

Legionnaires’ Disease Attacks Florida Tourists

Tuesday, March 18th, 2008

Orange County Health Department director Dr. Kevin Sherin has reported two incidents of Legionnaires’ disease in Orlando. The out-of-state tourists had both stayed at the Quality Inn Suites just off International Drive near Universal Studios, then travelled to Pinellas County where the disease was diagnosed.

The hotel operators voluntarily closed the hotel for a short time on Friday as state inspectors sampled water from the hotel pool and spa. Air quality tests continued to be taken this week. However, it may not be known for a couple of weeks if the hotel was the source of the disease due to the testing process.

The Center for Disease Control defines legionnaires’ disease as -

Legionellosis is an infection caused by the bacterium Legionella
pneumophila. The disease has two distinct forms:
Legionnaires’ disease, the more severe form of infection
which includes pneumonia, and
Pontiac fever, a milder illness.

Legionnaires’ disease acquired its name in 1976 when an outbreak of
pneumonia occurred among persons attending a convention of the American Legion
in Philadelphia. Later, the bacterium causing the illness was named
Legionella.

The symptoms for Legionnaires is similar to many other types of pneumonia so sometimes it is difficult for physicians to diagnose. But the symptoms include

a high fever, chills, and a cough. Some people may also suffer from muscle aches
and headaches. Chest X-rays are needed to find the pneumonia caused by the
bacteria, and other tests can be done on sputum (phlegm), as well as blood or
urine to find evidence of the bacteria in the body.
These symptoms usually begin 2 to 14 days after being exposed to the bacteria.

Because the disease is not transmitted from human to human, there is normally no public notice given for cases of Legionnaires’ unless there are 2 or more cases from the same location. However, once contracted, it is estimated that approximately 20% die from it.