Tuesday, July 28, 2009

I'm quite PROUD of my Alma Mater ... !!

Daily Herald
Wheaton College ranked second-most sober school in nation
By Elisabeth Mistretta | Daily Herald Staff
Published: 7/28/2009 3:30 PM

Whether Wheaton College's latest distinction is a good or not-so-good thing depends a lot on what you're looking for.

When The Princeton Review released results of its annual college rankings this week, the Christian institution in Wheaton was second in the nation in the Stone Cold Sober Schools category, right behind Brigham Young University in Utah.

BYU has held the top spot for 12 years and Wheaton is "a usual suspect" in that category, said Robert Franek, author of "The Best 371 Colleges, 2010 Edition."

The rankings are based on surveys of 122,000 college students, and any student with a college e-mail address can participate in the annual surveys at princetonreview.com.

Wheaton College officials say the ranking is a positive mark because it fits the school's moral philosophy.

"Part of our campus environment and goal is to cultivate an atmosphere that stimulates moral and intellectual growth," spokeswoman LaTonya Taylor said.

Wheaton College encourages all students to agree to a Community Covenant, which cites the school's Christian values and discourages behaviors officials believe are at odds with their religion and scripture, such as excessive alcohol consumption, any use of illegal drugs or anything deemed pornographic.

Taylor said many students are looking for such guidelines to help keep them true to their beliefs.

"The students who come to Wheaton are interested in growing their faith, as well as for challenging academics," she said.

In addition to being a the second-most sober school in the country, Wheaton also ranked in several other categories: first, Alternative Lifestyle Not an Alternative (low acceptance of gay community); second, Got Milk? (low beer consumption); second, Scotch & Soda, Hold the Scotch (low hard liquor consumption); third, Most Religious Students; fourth, Future Rotarians and Daughters of the American Revolution; fifth, Town-Gown Relations are Great (good relationship with Wheaton residents); sixth, Don't Inhale (low marijuana use); eighth, Most Conservative Students, 13th, Best Campus Food.

Last year the college was said to have the best food in the nation. This year it moved from fifth to first place for low acceptance of the gay community. Franek said the rankings vary from year to year based on the changing student body.

"Each list is an incredible resource because it reports so much information from primary sources, which is college students themselves," he said.

He added that there is no such thing as a bad ranking in the book. Instead, the categories are created simply to help prospective students make the best decisions.

"If you're a young, gay kid thinking of applying to any school, you want to know what the campus climate is," Franek said. "If the tolerance is low, you would at least want to understand that and prepare some questions. It doesn't mean you should stop your research there, but you should let that make your research that much more savvy. I don't want people to cross a school off their list simply because of our rankings."


Harvard University Green Tip of the Month - July 2009
A nice green tip from the Office for Sustainability...
----- Original Message -----
This is the campus-wide Harvard University Green Tip of the Month.
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Harvard University Green Tip of the Month


Eat Less Meat!

Industrial meat production, especially beef, accounts for 18% of the world's greenhouse gas emissions* (from the entire meat production cycle).

Pick up some vegetarian ingredients at a local farmer's market, including three near Harvard:

  1. Science Center market: Tuesdays 12:30-6pm, until October 27th
  2. Allston market: Fridays, 3-7pm
  3. Charles Hotel market: Fridays, 12-6pm & Sundays, 11-3pm
  4. Restaurant Associates weekly farmer's markets at HMS: Wednesdays, all day, Courtyard Cafe and Elements Cafe (alternating weeks)
  5. Mission Hill market: Thursdays, 11am-6pm at Brigham's Cricle (*near HSPH)

Or find a market near you: http://www.massfarmersmarkets.org

* United Nations (September 2008) "Livestock production alone contributes to 18 percent of the global warming effect - more than the emissions from every single car, train, and plane on the planet. Though livestock production only contributes 9 percent of carbon dioxide emissions, the sector is responsible for 37 percent of methane and 65 percent of nitrous oxide, both potent greenhouse gases." http://www.fao.org/docrep/010/a0701e/a0701e00.htm


Setting the Record Straight

July Green Tip

It is healthy to be vegetarian.

Studies have shown that vegetarians (who follow a well-balanced, low-fat, high-fiber diet) often have lower incidences of coronary artery disease, hypertension, obesity and some forms of cancer.


Your Actions Add Up!

If every Harvard affiliate replaced one average daily diet containing meat with one vegetarian meal a week, we would

Prevent 14 million pounds of CO2 from entering the atmosphere.

That's like taking 1,280 cars off the road!


Resources







Monday, July 27, 2009

Stella Zhou of HSPH Joins Brighter Green

Brighter Green Logo

Stella Zhou Joins Brighter Green as an Associate 7/20/2009

Harvard Public Health graduate student Stella Zhou becomes a Brighter Green Associate. Stella's interests include population-level bioethics, animal rights, and the relationship between public health and diet. A Chinese citizen, Stella hopes to use her degree to reinvigorate the bioethics curricula used in Chinese Universities. Brighter Green looks forward to working with Stella and gaining from her fresh insights.

China: Animal Welfare on the Legal Docket

July 26, 2009 8:58pm
Filed under:
Cats in cages

In future, a different destiny?

China has drafted it first Animal Protection Law. At present, Chinese animal law covers wildlife only. A team of experts headed by Chang Jiwen, director of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences’ Social Law Research Department, is looking to change this. On June 15, 2009, state media reported that the team finished drafting China’s first Animal Protection Law. According to the draft, severe cases of animal abuse, such as the hauling of cats from all over China to Guangdong Province for a Cantonese delicacy of shui zhu huo mao or water-boiled live cats, can result in the jailing of violators. Lighter punishments include fines of up to 6,000 yuan ($877.50) and detention periods of 15 days or less. The draft also proposes implanting data chips in pets as a means of controlling stray populations, and improving farm animal welfare through the adoption of humane breeding, transportation, and slaughter practices.

In August, the draft law will be published to solicit public opinion and will be submitted to various government departments by year-end. Repeated accounts of animal abuse reported by the Chinese media have spurred on the legal drafting team’s work. In 2002 for example, a student from Tsinghua University poured sulphuric acid into the mouths of Beijing zoo’s black bears. In 2005, a graduate student from Fudan University abused 30 stray cats, gouging out their eyes and eventually killing them. More recently, in 2006, a group of teenage girls in high heels trampled a number of cats to death, supposedly for fun. An Internet uproar ensued and the events sparked off heated ethical debates.

While China’s animal lovers responded eagerly to news of the draft law, critical voices were also heard. “We’re unable even to take care of the numerous poor, let alone animals. Let’s talk about human rights first!” was a common public response. Some went further, accusing the scholars and activists of blindly emulating the West and pointing out the hypocrisy of “animal welfare,” as the animals are ultimately killed regardless of how humane the slaughter.

In an interview with CCTV, Professor Chang, head of the drafting team, responded to such criticisms. He stressed that the team sought to craft the law in accord with the actual conditions for animals in China, with anti-abuse (that is, punishing the infliction of unnecessary pain on nonhuman animals) forming the basis of the law. Professor Chang admitted that it while it is currently unrealistic for China to mirror Western standards of animal welfare, he detailed step-by-step measures to improve Chinese animal welfare that can be implemented within the next two decades.

A final version of the draft law will have to go through the State Council, China's highest executive organ, and undergo three readings at the National People’s Congress (China's national legislature) before taking effect. Every change in life presents its own set of challenges. Such difficulties are inevitable, but are never reason enough to avoid action. This draft presents the Chinese people with a plan detailing not only better animal treatment, but also reforms to industrial animal agriculture systems and rural labor. The "humane" path will encounter roadblocks in China, but it is an important route to the future.

Sunday, July 26, 2009






Cost-Setting in Medical Interventions( hardly primary prevention, which cares for one's HEALTH)

Forget Who Pays Medical Bills,
It’s Who Sets the Cost
(and it's not preventing any problems, anyway!)


By DAVID LEONHARDT Published: July 25, 2009

Related
Political Memo: Partisan or Not, a Tough Course on Health Care (July 26, 2009)
Obama Defends Proposed Health Office
(July 26, 2009)
Obama Moves to Reclaim the Debate on Health Care (July 23, 2009)
Times Topics: Health Care Reform

WASHINGTON — Every fight over health care reform is different, and every fight over health care reform is the same.

In 1929, Michael Shadid, a doctor in western Oklahoma, proposed an idea for making medical care affordable to farmers. Rather than pay piecemeal for treatments, farmers would each contribute $50 a year to a cooperative. Dr. Shadid and his colleagues would pay their own salaries and expenses with the aggregate sum, and no farmer’s annual bill for family medical care would exceed $50.

Horrified by the plan, other Oklahoma doctors tried to revoke Dr. Shadid’s license. The conflict was soon duplicated across the country; cooperatives sprang up, and the American Medical Association tried to beat them back. The A.M.A.’s members, as the historian Paul Starr has written, felt threatened because the cooperatives “subjected doctors’ incomes and working conditions to direct control by their clients.”

The issue was clear: Who controls the doctor-patient relationship? That question has been at the core of every big subsequent battle over health care. Should doctors determine not only their patients’ treatment but also their own pay, through the fee-for-service system that has survived since the 1920s? Or should patients have more power in the relationship? And who could claim to act on patients’ behalf, monitoring treatments and bargaining with doctors?

A succession of presidents — from Harry S. Truman to Richard M. Nixon to Bill Clinton — volunteered the government for the role of patients’ advocate, and their grand efforts all failed. Now it is President Obama’s turn to try to remake America’s medical system.

Last week’s back and forth, when Congressional Democrats squabbled and Mr. Obama took his case to the public, highlighted how difficult his task will be. Reform of health care has the potential to threaten profits and incomes that make up one-sixth of the economy. More daunting, perhaps, Americans seem to have great trust in their doctors — more, certainly, than they trust the government on medical matters.

More than three in four Americans are “very satisfied” or “somewhat satisfied” with their own care, according to the latest New York Times/CBS News poll. But a substantial majority also say that the health care system needs fundamental change and that rising costs are a serious threat to the economy — a view that economists strongly share.

Thus the political challenge facing any effort at an overhaul: Americans say they want change, but they also want to preserve their own status quo.

The disconnect can be explained partly by the peculiar economics of health care. Because third parties — the government or a private insurer — typically pay the bill, many people miss the fact that the money originally comes from them. They see the benefits of medical care without seeing the costs.

But trust in doctors is a factor as well. Even when doctors order costly treatments with serious side effects and little evidence of their being effective, as studies find is common, patients are loath to question the decision. Instead of blaming such treatments for the rising cost of medicine, many people are inclined to blame forces that health economists say are far less important, like greedy insurance companies or onerous malpractice laws.

Mr. Obama is well aware of the public perception. This is why he directs his criticism not at doctors but at insurers and drug companies. In his news conference on Wednesday night, he advocated creating a government panel with the power to begin moving Medicare away from its fee-for-service model and emphasize outcomes instead. But he described it in doctor-friendly terms — as “an independent group of doctors and medical experts who are empowered to eliminate waste and inefficiency.”

His rhetorical choices highlight one of the least discussed but most important conflicts in the current health care debate. The fight isn’t just a matter of Democrats vs. Republicans, Blue Dogs vs. liberals or patients vs. insurers. It is also doctors vs. doctors.

That’s the same as in Oklahoma in 1929. And what has happened to Dr. Shadid’s model? It has survived. He built a team of doctors who collaborated closely and were not paid based on how many procedures they performed. Today, this description fits the Mayo Clinic and the Cleveland Clinic (which Mr. Obama visited on Thursday), as well as less-known groups around the country.

Medicare data shows that these groups generally provide less expensive care and appear to deliver better results. Armed with this data, the doctors who run the groups have been lobbying Congress to make their model a bigger part of health reform. Two weeks ago, 13 such groups released a letter saying that recent versions of proposed legislation did not control costs enough.

Their goal is to weaken the fee-for-service system. In its place, doctors might receive a lump-sum payment to treat a patient with a certain condition, based on average costs elsewhere and on what scientific evidence had found to be effective. Hospitals with especially good outcomes might earn bonuses.

Advocates say such a system could ultimately give doctors more control. Rather than having to organize their schedules around the tests and procedures that insurers agree to reimburse, doctors could opt for the treatments they deem most effective. “It’s a lot more accountability, which is why it’s scary for physicians,” said Dr. Mark McClellan, a former head of Medicare under George W. Bush. “But in some ways it’s also more autonomy.”

On Tuesday, doctors and hospital executives from 10 cities with below-average cost growth gathered in Washington for a conference called, “How Do They Do That?” They were a diverse lot, only some of whom hailed from providers resembling the Mayo Clinic. While crediting a range of factors for their success, they generally agreed about what ails American medicine.

When Dr. McClellan, who helped organize the conference, asked how many people thought the fee-for-service system was “archaic and fundamentally at odds” with good practice, most hands shot up. In effect, they were siding with Dr. Shadid and against a system that provides incentives for more and more care, regardless of its benefit.

“There are no consequences right now to over-utilization,” Dr. Anthony F. Oliva, chief medical officer of the Guthrie Healthcare System, in northeast Pennsylvania, said later. “If you don’t have consequences, you won’t change the culture. If you don’t have consequences, the people that are killing themselves to control cost are going to say, ‘Why am I doing this?’”

It is a message, of course, that a doctor can deliver more easily than anyone else.

Is the verb 'friend' related to 'befriend'?

Is the verb 'friend' related to 'befriend'?

I argued, during my Friday mid-afternoon (10 July) co-presentation with Vance 'Joy of Soy' and 'EarthtoPhilly' Lehmkuhl on social media at the 35th Annual NAVS Vegetarian Summerfest, that these two verbs are too similar to be unrelated. An audience member disagreed with me, but Toronto's Lauren Corman of Animal Voices Podcast seems to agree because during her most recent podcast she asked listeners to 'befriend' them on Facebook.

Listen and subscribe here:
http://www.learnoutloud.com/Podcast-Directory/Sports-and-Hobbies/Pets/Animal-Voices-Podcast/6803

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Summerfest Presentation: What IS Social Media? What ARE Social Media?

What IS Social Media?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_media

Social media is online content created by people using highly accessible and scalable publishing technologies. Social media is a shift in how people discover, read and share news, information and content; it's a fusion of sociology and technology, transforming monologues (one to many) into dialogues (many to many) and is the democratization of information, transforming people from content readers into publishers. Social media has become extremely popular because it allows people to connect in the online world to form relationships for personal, political and business use. Businesses also refer to social media as user-generated content (UGC) or consumer-generated media (CGM).
Information outputs and human interaction

Primarily, social media depend on interactions between people as the discussion and integration of words to build shared-meaning, using technology as a conduit.

Social media utilities create opportunities for the use of both inductive and deductive logic by their users. Claims or warrants are quickly transitioned into generalizations due to the manner in which shared statements are posted and viewed by all. The speed of communication, breadth, and depth, and ability to see how the words build a case solicits the use of rhetoric. Induction is frequently used as a means to validate or authenticate different users' statements and words. Rhetoric is an important part of today’s language in social media.

Social media are not finite: there is not a set number of pages or hours. The audience can participate in social media by adding comments, instant messaging or even editing the stories themselves.


Examples

Social media can take many different forms, including Internet forums, weblogs, social blogs, wikis, podcasts, pictures and video. Technologies include: blogs, picture-sharing, vlogs, wall-postings, email, instant messaging, music-sharing, crowdsourcing, and voice over IP, to name a few. Examples of social media applications are Google Groups (reference, social networking), Wikipedia (reference), MySpace (social networking), Facebook (social networking), MouthShut.com yelp.com (product reviews), Youmeo (social network aggregation), Last.fm (personal music), YouTube (social networking and video sharing), Avatars United (social networking), Second Life (virtual reality), Flickr (photo sharing), Twitter (social networking and microblogging), Open Diary (blogging), and other microblogs such as Jaiku. Many of these social media services can be integrated via social network aggregation platforms like Mybloglog and Plaxo.





Social media: a categorization

Examples of social media software applications include:

Communication

Collaboration

Multimedia

Reviews and Opinions

Entertainment

Social Media is online content created by people using highly accessible and scalable publishing technologies. Social media is a shift in how people discover, read and share news, information and content; it's a fusion of sociology and technology, transforming monologues (one to many) into dialogues (many to many) and is the democratization of information, transforming people from content readers into publishers. Social media has become extremely popular because it allows people to connect in the online world to form relationships for personal, political and business use. Businesses also refer to social media as user-generated content (UGC) or consumer-generated media (CGM).

Sunday, April 26, 2009

'Eden' Rhymes with 'Peden'


On my refrigerator is a refrigerator magnet from folk song artist Jay Mankita, for his melodic and memorable album, 'Dogs are watching us." He talks about their trust in us (unlike cats, some might add; others have inspired the trust and love of one or more cats, but that's a different day's posting).

Some of us may find this topic mildly to moderately offensive (some may find it greatly or even profoundly bothering or offensive). It's an obvious takeoff from the song 'God is watching us' which gave many folks pause in the face of an unsettled society in multifactorial upheaval.

Others might think, well, if God is not vegan or even vegetarian (think of all the omnivorous animals in the creation and the deadly 'food chain' observation, even if some of us are exempt, as perhaps the stewards - we humans - who can honor God in the respect of loving all creation (a la NT scholar and professor Richard Alan Young: Is God a Vegetarian?), then at least (omnivorous) dogs CAN be (and should be, for ethical reasons.

Others object, but though cats need taurine (which CAN now be synthesized in a lab (it's good to be gifted with the neurological complexity that enables rational behaviors AND rational analysis, which can lead to the social construction of scientific method and scientific results which reshape society according to socially desirable HUMANE values), (omnivorous) dogs clearly CAN be not merely vegetarian, but also vegan.

The watershed book in the Vegetarian Dogs (and possibly! cats) movement was Dogs and Cats Go Vegetarian by the co-authors whose surname rhymes with EDEN: Barbara Lynn Peden (who did most of the journal research, I'm told; she is now a folksinger, I'm told) and her former husband, James Peden, who in the divorce got full rights to their shared book production AND VegDog & VegCat and empire (he had a paying job on the side and could sustain the D&GV 'empire' (enterprise) ("
Harbingers of a New Age"), and she, claiming no extra-corporate skills of her own (though she had done most of the journal research and networking), left with little in the way terminated employees often do, with no IP rights to the work they have done along the way. Jim has since written new literature and a new chapter in the re-released book. In this light, one ought to read the book about Little Tyke, the vegetarian (not vegan) lioness, sold by the American Vegan Society (she died from being overstressed and overexposed on television as a celebrity - read 'oddity' or 'curiosity')

Blaming PETA in the recent media blitzes about vegan - read that again - not vegetarian but VEGAN dogs AND CATS - are those who (IMHO rightly) are concerned that some animals are, when not technically assisted with periodic lab-derived supplementary doses, suffer - read that again - SUFFER. However, the question persists, particularly in a Christian (read Genesis: God gave the animals the world; there was no DEATH (thus no killing for food) in Eden (rhymes with Peden).

More broadly, in monotheistic, Abrahamic 'traditions' of receiving the common literature of Genesis, the problem remains. Mohammed reported taught that 'it is better to drink milk than to eat meat', and while not PROSCRIBING the eating of meat (forbidding or teaching that it is wrong), there is remarkable tolerance in some branches of Christendom and Jewish practice, and even calendared encouragements of it (for its spiritual and 'meditative' or devotional benefits - as in Lent or in PRAYER AND fasting, etc.). Some monastics are largely or always vegetarian in some branches of Christendom. Dissident NON-MONASTIC groups have been suppressed, but often for doctrinary (not doctrinaire, but doctrinary - related to teaching or 'doctrine') or 'non-subscribing' (to doctrine) reasons.

What concerns me, though, is the philosophical problem of thinking inductively in the present world (as we all must) and committing oneself to a loving, rational (and both all-wise and all-knowing AND all-powerful) Deity, known among the uninitiated as God, though sometimes and by some through more personal names, quite reverently thought.

God has an interest in our intentionality - our behaviors - deliberate and unintentional
Some ways of being ourselves behaviorally and mentally are better (or at least less objectionable) than other behaviors. Some secular folks agree to this much; not all do.
In Genesis we are given stewardship in the sense of caring for all life; from this our (a) ecological and (b) humane AND (c) sociological stewardship obligations are derived.

In terms of our spiritually-derived public policy contributions, how can we endorse (let alone mandate) that we OR others care for animals - and humans, too - and the ecosystem in ways that trade off the well-being of some for that of others, even if mathematically one is numerically or quantitatively better.

Further, we’re helped along in this reflection by the prophecy of Isaiah, where the predatory rests with the herbivore, and there is no more exploitation of one (type) of the other (type), nor of one (type) by the other (type).


So, is keeping carnivorous animals, even pre-existing animals BEFORE any possible PHASING OUT of carnivorous animals by massive spay-neuter programs, ethically tolerable, particularly for those who derive at least part of their moral reasoning and rationale from Biblical sources and indirectly from others who also derive their thinking from those Biblical sources/texts?

Searching for vegan-friendly pet food is laudable in general, but specifically in light of this contextual reflection, that somehow, in the process BEFORE God becomes 'All in All', we ought to live in light of the eschaton, the hope of which (perhaps the Indwelling spirit, would be a foretaste or earnest (like earnest money) of one's spiritual inheritance, a life in a world of no more violence, for which righteousness we are to hunger and thirst (and surely our food would be characterized by having no violence).

Sunday, March 22, 2009

sleeping the rest of Sunday and Monday until 7:30 am to catch up on his sleep deficit

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Blogged and did laundry Saturday, when I should have been snoring in the bedroom.

Friday, March 20, 2009

Deciding whether to sleep all weekend, from now through early Monday morning. Looks as if i will.
Celebrating the annual 'Great American Meatout' - kicking the meat habit - far out of history

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Meetings & 2009 EIGHR all day; recovering from 'a bug' - probably hundreds of millions of such bugs!

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Stuffed noise cleared with salty water; dry throat assuaged with cold filtered water, I go to sleep.

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

"I never get sick", but I dragged through my last 2 of 8 hours today; I may have the flu.

Monday, March 16, 2009

Preparing student acceptances for June 8-12 2009 HSPH Ethical Issues in Global Health Research event
Struggling to get home to watch (a) 24 and (b) House; or is it (a) House and (b) 24?
Accepting students (who paid) into the 2009 EIGHR course: http://www.HSPH.Harvard.edu/bioethics/

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Looking for thoughtful, articulate, kind, principled vegetarians to write celebrative songs about the joy of living by vegan values!
Looking for thoughtful, articulate, kind, principled vegetarians to write celebrative songs about the joy of living by vegan values!
Preparing 2009 EIGHR acceptances for June 8-12 after attending Sat AM session of 2009 National Undergraduate Bioethics Conference @Harvard

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Preparing for National Undergraduate Bioethics Conference at Harvard Friday/Saturday, then 2009 EIGHR student acceptances for June 8-12.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Preparing for public ethics workshop Thur 1-5 pm;Natl Undergrad Bioethics Conf @Harvard Fri/Saturday
VejNaturals Wed PM; Natl Undergrad Bioethics Conf @Harvard Fri/Sat;public ethics wrkshp Thurs 1-5 pm
Preparing for National Undergraduate Bioethics Conference @Harvard Friday/Saturday &public ethics workshop for Thursday afternoon

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Psyched about meeting Paul Krugman (Nobel Prize, Economics) at HMS this afternoon.

Monday, March 09, 2009

Psyched about HOUSE at 8 pm and 24 at 9 pm tonight; then because I'm zonked, I'll go to sleep early.
Processing applications for the 2009 HSPH Ethical Issues in Global Research course.
Attended 3 GREAT nutrition lectures by 3 city school food service directors at HSPH: they do MUCH.

Sunday, March 08, 2009

I'm marketing the 2009 EIGHR course - Ethical Issues in Global Health Research: http://www.HSPH.Harvard.edu/bioethics/ Attend if qualified.

Thursday, March 05, 2009

https://isites.harvard.edu/icb/icb.do?keyword=k32021&pageid=icb.page246717

present

Thursday, March 12th

1:00 - 5:00 pm

2 Divinity Avenue Cambridge, MA

Reception to follow symposium

Welcome: Dr. Daniel Wikler, Professor of Ethics and Population Health, Harvard School of Public Health

Opening Address (1:00-1:45 pm)

“Health and Faith in the Obama Era”

Associate Director for Health, Center for Faith-Based and Community Initiatives, HHS

Panel 1 (1:45-3:15 pm)

Faith-Based Organizations in Public Health: Constitutional, Legal, and Ethical Issues

Director, Wake Forest School of Divinity Center for Religion and Public Affairs;

Associate Professor, Boston University School of Law

Moderator: Richard Parker

Lecturer in Public Policy, Sr. Fellow, Shorenstein Center, Harvard Kennedy School

Panel 2 (3:30-5:00 pm)

Contraception and Faith: Including the Voice of Religion in Family Planning

Rev. Eugene Rivers, III

J. Donald Monan Professor of Theology, Boston College

Associate, Department of the History of Science, Harvard University

Moderator: Dr. Marcia Castro

This event is open to the public.

Questions? Please contact Alyson at arosewoo@hsph.harvard.edu




http://maynardsclark.blogspot.com/ Faith-Based Orgs in Public Health, Thur Mar 12, 1-5 pm, Harvard-Yenching Inst, 2 Divinity Av Cambridge MA
http://maynardsclark.blogspot.com/ Faith-Based Orgs in Public Health, Thur Mar 12, 1-5 pm, Harvard-Yenching Inst, 2 Divinity Av Cambridge MA

The Harvard School of Public Health and Harvard Divinity School

present

The Second Annual Symposium on

The Roles of Faith-Based Organizations in Public Health

Thursday, March 12th

1:00 - 5:00 pm

Harvard-Yenching Institute, Auditorium

2 Divinity Avenue Cambridge, MA

Reception to follow symposium

Welcome: Dr. Daniel Wikler, Professor of Ethics and Population Health, Harvard School of Public Health

Opening Address (1:00-1:45 pm)

“Health and Faith in the Obama Era”

Kimberly Konkel

Associate Director for Health, Center for Faith-Based and Community Initiatives, HHS

Panel 1 (1:45-3:15 pm)

Faith-Based Organizations in Public Health: Constitutional, Legal, and Ethical Issues

Melissa Rogers

Director, Wake Forest School of Divinity Center for Religion and Public Affairs;

Member, President’s Advisory Council on Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships

Richard Katskee

Assistant Legal Director, American’s United for Separation of Church and State

Kevin Outterson

Associate Professor, Boston University School of Law

Moderator: Richard Parker

Lecturer in Public Policy, Sr. Fellow, Shorenstein Center, Harvard Kennedy School

Panel 2 (3:30-5:00 pm)

Contraception and Faith: Including the Voice of Religion in Family Planning

Dianne Luby

President and CEO, Planned Parenthood League of Massachusetts

Rev. Eugene Rivers, III

Pastor, Azusa Christian Community; Co-chair, National TenPoint Leadership Foundation

Allan Hill

Andelot Professor of Demography, Dept. of Global Health and Population, Harvard School of Public Health

Lisa Sowle Cahill

J. Donald Monan Professor of Theology, Boston College

Nadine Weidman

Associate, Department of the History of Science, Harvard University

Moderator: Dr. Marcia Castro

Assistant Professor of Demography, Harvard School of Public Health

Sponsored by: The Department of Global Health and Population, Harvard School of Public Health; Africa Health Forum; The Office of Student Life, Harvard Divinity School; HSPH Student Group for Reproductive Health and Rights

This event is open to the public.

Questions? Please contact Alyson at arosewoo@hsph.harvard.edu

Wednesday, March 04, 2009

Dementia risk TRIPLED for those who DON'T EAT ENOUGH FRUITS and VEGETABLES
Oh, the conflicts in vegan friendship; a workplace agenda forced the decision - still 100% vegan
Plugging away in Longwood; much is accomplished, so celebrate another day of working productively.

Tuesday, March 03, 2009

Callig it aniht for the day. G'night!
Heading for home: will I stop by the dry cleaners for fresh shirts or the grocery for refreshments?

Monday, March 02, 2009

Watching 24 for 2 hrs, then sleeping for work Longwood Tuesday for documents, speeches, lectures
Another hour on the summer intensive research ethics course, then home to HOUSE and 24

Sunday, March 01, 2009

Maynard will spend snowy Sunday in talking heads political TV talk shows, sleeping to prepare for Monday, catching up on electronic matters.

Friday, February 27, 2009

spending weekend in Longwood Medical Area marketing & organizing 2009 Research Ethics summer course

Thursday, February 26, 2009

There are SO many things to do in this job, and I have three FT jobs packed into 40 hours
Suffering Firefox and connectivity problems like one would NOT believe, like atheists trying to pray
Working on 2009 EIGHR: this week had been good with inquiries and applicants, but I need dozens more

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Passed the half-way mark today in this week's work in Longwood Medical Area: some victories & wins

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Watching Obama tonight at 9 pm EST, then back to LMA for remainder of week
Very sleepy; don't know why; sleep deficit is cumulative.

Monday, February 23, 2009

Friend me everywhere, PARTICULARLY if you've friended me in one place but not in others. I only have 3672 friends on Facebook!
'Friend' me everywhere - PARTICULARLY kif you've friended me in one place in not in others.

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Heading to Longwood Medical Area for the week to end month of February - and do some serious work!
After getting vegan foods from the grocery store, I'll rest for the rest of the day.
Sunday morning will focus on talking heads political talk shows
Muslin cleric argues that Muslims have elected female heads of state; liberal US hasn't.
Various Abrahamic traditionalists talk with secularists about hope for interfaith search for peace
Hearing interfaith panel talk of search for peace; secularists want to abolish tradition first
Listening to gracious Muslim clergy from Iran talking about love of traditionalism across faiths
Listening to non-Catholic liberal clergywoman denouncing the current Pope as power-hungry
Listening to interfaith panel debate RC traditionalism and Tridentine mass

Saturday, February 21, 2009

Enjoyed BVA vegan public speakers' group; organized EIGHR summer course; sundry electronic matters
Enjoyed vegan public speakers, now promoting & organizing June 2009 EIGHR intensive course and finishing personal stuff before snowstorm
Enjoyed vegan public speakers, now promoting & organizing June 2009 EIGHR intensive course and finishing personal stuff before snowstorm
I'm working Saturday on promoting & organizing June 2009 EIGHR intensive course; mid-afternoon hiatus of vegan public speakers' group

Friday, February 20, 2009

Defining 'qvelling' as 'parental pride to learn that their children are keeping vegan'

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Firefox has thousands of Add-Ons: some of them VERY useful;others trivial, or worse, dumb or harmful

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

I'm displeased with what I didn't finish today but quite pleased with what was accomplished.
I'm not at all pleased with what I didn't get done today, but I'm quite pleased with what I did do.
My refurbished laptop arrived with a new motherboard and keyboard; scrubbed hard drive; restoring it

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Still researching the DDE question

Monday, February 16, 2009

Searching for Catholic moral teachings on problem pregnancies where clinicians choose mother's or child's life: do nothing or remove child?

Sunday, February 15, 2009

Think I can hit the grocery this evening on the way home from LMA?

Saturday, February 14, 2009

Looking forward to the Sunday morning talking heads news shows; telling 3517 FB friends to be kind
Show kindness to someone; even show kindness ("structurally") to everyone by being vegan - AND KIND!
Working through the 3-day weekend on 2009 EIGHR, vegetarian reading and writing, and personal stuff.

Friday, February 13, 2009

Everything I NEED to do at the office this week has been completed @ c. 5pm
Pleasantly surprised that my stocks were LEVEL for the day and funds rose incrementally.
Coffee stupor, to evaporate when work is over.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

I must run BECAUSE this evening I chair the http://Vegetarian.Meetup.com/27/
I must run BECAUSE this eveningI chair the http://Vegetarian.Meetup.com/27/
Lots of reworking to do for this vegetarian - at paid employment and in my veg research and writing

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Struggling with a crisis over 2009 EIGHR; I need GREAT students NOW !! PONTO !! PDQ !!

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

I have bid a fond adieu to my best friend of time time. I am headed home for sweet repose.
Found a friend (but lost a friend - OW! - in the background! OW!). But FOUND a LOVELY friend. yes
As a dear soul from China once told me-"Emotions are really complicated!" Wish we were still talking

Monday, February 09, 2009

Hewlett-Packard (bless their hearts) is taking back my dv9410 laptop; replacing motherboard for free
I'm working on WHO workshops and the 2009 EIGHR research ethics course; who is qualified to attend or discuss this event or content?
I'm working on WHO workshops and the 2009 EIGHR research ethics course; who wants to attend or discuss this event or content?

Sunday, February 08, 2009

Heading home to phone my mother (from my home, not 'on the road'); bless her lovely soul!!
Trying DESPERATELY to get away from the computer tonight; will my IM partners NOT understand in time?

Saturday, February 07, 2009

Reviewing vegans I've known for 35+ years, it's evident that 'ageless vegan' is a myth, not literal.
Saturday at BVA's vegan all-day event in Brookline was outstanding! 'Friend' me, everyone!

Friday, February 06, 2009

http://Vegan.Meetup.com/23/ then www.BostonVegan.org all day Saturday - be there IF you can! Loveya!
Thinking about evidence-based analyses of various and competing ethical claims
Busy day in the Longwood Medical Area - WAY TOO BUSY!

Thursday, February 05, 2009

To Countway to place Stephen Holland's Public Health Ethics on reserve for ID250, then home via MBTA

Wednesday, February 04, 2009

I'm noting >3300 Facebook 'friends' - many of these FBFs are incredibly lovely friends

Tuesday, February 03, 2009

Heading home from Harvard: sleep, sweet sleep (and a little vegan food at home would be nice, also!)

Monday, February 02, 2009

Searching for used but good (or UN-used) power cord for my HPMultimedia Laptop (used for work etc.).

Sunday, February 01, 2009

Thinking about www.VeggiePrideParade.com