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Health & Society

Pot’s Uphill Toke in Florida, CIA Torture Cover-Up, Obama Between Two Ferns, Dieudonné: The Live Wire

March 12, 2014 | FlaglerLive | Leave a Comment

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Florida’s medical marijuana amendment is no sure thing, a senator reveals a CIA torture cover-up, Bill O’Reilly attacks Obama’s Between Two Ferns appearance, Kevin bacon offers up 1980s awareness, Dieudonné heats up the hate on France’s comedy circuit.

The Dangers of Problematic Prescribing: A Double Dose of Warnings

March 9, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 3 Comments

A detail from Jean Shin's 'Chemical Balance' installation at the Smithsonian, showing prescription pill bottles collected from nursing homes and arranged like stalagmites. Pill bottles similarly fall from the ceiling like stalactites, not shown in the image. (Mr. TinDC)

Two new reports from the CDC show the dangers of overprescribing narcotics and antibiotics. Is there a way for doctors and consumers to make better decisions? An instructive set of answers.

Four Palm Coast Baker Acts in 24 Hours: A Day in the Life of Flagler Sheriff’s Deputies

March 6, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 13 Comments

Baker act flagler county

In barely a 24-hour period between late Monday afternoon and the early evening of Tuesday (March 3 and 4), deputies were involved in four commitments under the Baker Act, each one is illustrative of the variety of mental health situations deputies are confronting, compelling them to make the determination between simply diffusing a situation, making an arrest or carrying out a Baker Act.

A 7-Year-Old Girl Is Baker Acted at Belle Terre Elementary; It’s Not Punishment, District Says

March 4, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 21 Comments

The Baker Acting of a 7-year-old girl at Belle Terre Elementary last week, following a report of her allegedly lacerating the dean of students with thumb tacks, is one of three or four Baker Acts of students in the district every month, though they’re usually older. The district defends the Baker Acts as a necessary last resort that addresses underlying issues, and that must not be seen as retribution or punishment.

Flagler-Based Family Life Center Will Provide Rape-Exam Services, Ending Year of Failures Under Children’s Advocacy Center

March 3, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

A waiting room at the Children's Advocacy Center's then-new space in Bunnell. The center had pledged it would provide forensic exams for rape victims, only to break its pledge. The service will now be provided by the Family Life Center at its facilities. (© FlaglerLive)

The Children’s Advocacy Center failures came to light last spring when it failed to provide a certified nurse following a rape, forcing the victim to wait for hours. The Flagler County Sheriff’s Office will administer the contract, awarded to Palm Coast and Bunnell-based Family Life Center. which says it has Flagler-based nurses to provide exams when needed.

From Child Protection to Early learning, Advocates Aim For More Serious Funding From 2014 Legislature

March 2, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

With Florida’s coffers filling again and state leaders focusing on child protection, advocates are hopeful the 2014 legislative session will bring both policy and funding gains for children’s services as high-profile issues include a massive crackdown on sexually violent predators and an overhaul of the child-welfare system.

Lawmaker Files Bill Favoring Trauma Centers Run by HCA, Gov. Scott’s Former Company

February 27, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 7 Comments

The proposal, opposed by numerous Florida hospitals, would help the HCA health-care chain keep trauma centers open and could short-circuit a debate about how the Florida Department of Health determines where new trauma centers should be allowed to open.

2-Year-Old Girl Brought to Hospital Bruised and Unresponsive; Palm Coast Man Charged With Aggravated Child Abuse

February 27, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 21 Comments

Stanley Wykretowicz, a 38-year-old resident of Palm Coast, claimed his 2-year-old daughter fell in the tub, but doctors discovered extensive internal and external injuries that required emergency surgery after the child was taken to a children’s hospital in Jacksonville. Wykretowicz is at the Flagler jail on $150,000 bond.

Senate President Says No to More Authority and Prescription Power For Nurse Practitioners

February 26, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 10 Comments

A House bill would give advanced-practice nurses more authority, including prescribing of controlled substances, and set up a pathway to independent practice, not supervised by physicians. But Senate President Don Gaetz opposes it.

Stand Your Ground’s Fatal Flaw, DNA Meets Dog Poop, Arizona’s Bigotry, Adidas’s Sex Tourism: The Live Wire

February 26, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

How John Locke would have interpreted–and derided–Stand Your Ground, child obesity’s encouraging trend, several states copy Arizona’s anti-gay bigotry, devaluing honor classes, Raymond Chandler’s 10 rules of writing a detective novel and Mozart’s full 21st piano concerto.

Politicians’ Pot Dilemma: Whether To Inhale Florida’s Medical Marijuana Joint

February 25, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 8 Comments

Pols' pot question. (Arbri Shameti)

The elevation of medical marijuana to a theological level is not unique to Florida. Many legislators from Georgia to Kentucky to Iowa have invoked conversations with God as they came to embrace medical pot.

Baker Acts, Age and Social Responsibility: Sheriff Manfre’s Alert to Emerging Perils and Possible Solutions

February 24, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 8 Comments

In a broad-ranging discussion before the Palm Coast City Council, Flagler Sheriff Jim Manfre described a deteriorating mental health landscape affected by age and other stresses, but also pointed to mental health courts and other ways to address the growing problem without turning to cops and jails.

Matanzas and Flagler Palm Coast High Learn Of Suicide of Senior Alexandria Rodriguez

February 19, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 6 Comments

On Tuesday, the grandfather of Alexandria Rodriguez, an 18-year-old senior who’d attended Matanzas High School last year and Flagler Palm Coast High School until Thanksgiving, came to FPC to retrieve her two younger sisters and inform the administration that Alex, as she was known, had committed suicide that morning.

Obamacare Enrollment Surging in Florida Despite Resistance from State Officials

February 18, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 20 Comments

By the end of January, nearly 300,000 Floridians had enrolled in a new health plan through Obamacare — a surge that left most other states in the dust, despite state officials’ opposition to the Affordable Care Act and the relative scarcity of helpers available.

5 Years After 7-year-old Gabriel Myers’s Suicide, Psychotropic Drugs Still Overprescribed in Foster Care

February 11, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 17 Comments

Gabriel Myers was on psychotropic medications when he hung himself.

At the time, about 5 percent of all U.S. children were treated with psychotropic medications, but in Florida’s foster care system, 15.2 percent of children received at least one such medication. Of these, more than 16 percent were being medicated without the consent of a parent, guardian or judge. Not much has changed.

Stand Your Ground: Florida is Not My Castle. And It’s Not Yours, Either.

February 11, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 34 Comments

The right to stand one’s ground against aggression in one’s home is unquestioned, but, argues Julie Delegal, in public, spaces must be shared, peacefully. The castle doctrine cannot be extended to cover the entire state, as Florida’s Stand Your Ground law does.

How Obamacare’s Enemies Turned a Victory For Workers’ Freedom Into a “Job Killer”

February 9, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 50 Comments

marc chagall over vitebsk

The prediction that Obamacare will lead to the equivalent of 2.5 million fewer jobs has nothing to do with businesses cutting the workforce and everything to do with workers being finally free of job-lock, now that they don;t need to stay in a job to have health insurance. That’s a good, and very American, thing, not the job-killing catastrophe Obamacare’s enemies make it out to be.

Ignoring PTSD Crisis at Home: Americans Shot and Stabbed In Their Own Neighborhoods

February 9, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 11 Comments

But will the fuller diagnosis detect PTSD? (Airman Magazine)

Americans with traumatic injuries develop PTSD at rates comparable to veterans of war. Just like veterans, civilians can suffer flashbacks, nightmares, paranoia, and social withdrawal. But Americans wounded in their own neighborhoods are not getting treatment for PTSD. They’re not even getting diagnosed.

The Diagnosis

February 5, 2014 | Pierre Tristam | 77 Comments

Thanks for the radiation. (© FlaglerLive)

FlaglerLive Editor Pierre Tristam learned he had cancer over the holidays. He describes the experience and his travels since, mostly down and up the abyss that becomes a premier tourist spot for many of those coming to grips with the diagnosis, even though death row appears, in his case, a very long way off.

Florida Lawmakers Would Stiffen Penalties On Insurers Discriminating Against Gun Owners

February 5, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 9 Comments

Insurance companies could face tougher penalties if they impose higher rates, refuse to issue or cancel auto or homeowner policies due to gun ownership, under a measure backed by a House committee Tuesday.

Healthy Families and Other Children’s Programs Could Benefit From Scott’s Election-Year Budget

February 3, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 4 Comments

She'll believe it when she sees it. (Jeffrey Pioquinto)

Scott’s proposed budget includes an additional $7 million for Healthy Families Florida, a program that reduces child abuse and neglect, and $3.6 million for Early Steps, which screens the youngest children for disabilities and delays, the better to catch them at the earliest and most correctable.

In Major Shift, U.S. Chamber of Commerce Now Urges Fix, Not Repeal, of Obamacare

February 1, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce's Thomas Donohue doesn't see repeal of Obamacare as a realistic option. (Facebook)

In 2010, the Chamber got behind a major business lawsuit to fight it at the U.S. Supreme Court. Now, in a striking about-face, the chamber says the Affordable Care Act is here to stay and should be worked on, not repealed.

Scott Pitches Cut of Sales Tax on Rental Properties and $80 Million for Cancer Research

January 28, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

Rick Scott has been on a tax-cutting and spending-proposal tour of the state in the run-up to his budget's unveiling on Wednesday. (Facebook)

Scott will ask lawmakers to support a $100 million reduction in the commercial lease tax that now brings in about $1.4 billion a year, and $60 million to existing cancer centers as they seek National Cancer Institute designation.

Supreme Court Clears Medical Marijuana Pot Proposal; Floridians Vote On It November 4

January 27, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 20 Comments

medical marijuana pot initiative florida constitution

In a significant victory for advocates of the initiative, a divided Florida Supreme Court on Monday ruled 4-3 that the wording of the proposed constitutional amendment to legalize medical marijuana passes legal muster and can now appear on the November election ballot, giving Floridians a direct say. Polls have shown a 3-to-1 majority of Floridians favoring legalization.

Hendry County, With Highest Uninsured Rate in Florida, Sees Little Impact From Obamacare

January 27, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 8 Comments

U.S. Sugar's Clewiston Factory is one of the biggest sugar producing factories in the country and the primary employer in the area with more than 1,600 workers. (C-Monster)

Thirty-five percent of Hendry County’s 33,000 residents under 65 lack health insurance, but nearly a month after the health law’s expansion of coverage began, local health officials say little has changed for most uninsured residents.

Virulent Flu Season Aside, Potent RSV Bug Is Taking a Toll on Florida Children

January 26, 2014 | FlaglerLive | Leave a Comment

Respiratory Syncytial Virus, or RSV, is serious and highly contagious. There’s no vaccination around to keep your little one from catching it. And its seasonal duration is longer in Florida than in any other state, stretching from mid-August to March.

Medical Marijuana Initiative Gets Needed Signature to Make November Ballot, Pending Court Clearance

January 24, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 20 Comments

With 710,508 validated signatures statewide in Florida— 27, 359 more than the required 683,149 — and reaching signature requirements in the bare minimum of 14 congressional districts, People United for Medical Marijuana beat a Feb. 1 deadline for submitting petitions to the state.

Fulfilling Pledge, Rep. Travis Hutson Files Animal Cruelty Bill Inspired By FPC Student

January 23, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 14 Comments

Rep. Travis Hutson conferring with students from Flagler Palm Coast High School and Matanzas High School in October, during an elimination process that led to the animal cruelty bill Hutson filed on Jan. 17. (© FlaglerLive)

Animal abuse may cost abusers far more in penalties and punishment if a bi-partisan bill inspired by Flagler Palm Coast High School student Morgan Purtlebaugh and filed by Rep. Travis Hutson last week becomes law.

California Sharply Improves Regulatory Oversight of Assisted-Living Facilities

January 22, 2014 | FlaglerLive | Leave a Comment

The wide-ranging array of proposed regulations would mandate annual inspections of the facilities and increase the size of financial penalties that the state can levy for failures in care. The proposals would also step up mandatory training for assisted living employees, require facilities to employ registered nurses in some instances and demand that California post inspection results online for the public to review.

Obamacare’s Popularity Overwhelms Florida Blue as System Crashes, Costing Enrollees

January 20, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 16 Comments

Many who signed up and paid Florida Blue for their new plan between Oct. 1 and Dec. 31 say the insurer has lost them in its computer system.  Now, when they go to the doctor or try to get a prescription filled, they have to pay the bill themselves or cancel.

Marijuana Legalization: A Dissent

January 11, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 36 Comments

We can all recite the arguments for legalization of marijuana. But making marijuana available to anyone over the age of 21 seems to me to be a sad statement of societal surrender, rather than an uplifting event, argues Steve Robinson.

Again Breaking a Pledge, Children’s Advocacy Center Sets Ultimatum On Rape-Crisis Intervention as Top Cops Scramble

January 9, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 9 Comments

In July, Sheriff Jim Manfre, seen here speaking with the Children Advocacy Center's Terri Karol, the CAC's vice president for financial operations, was among several top officials--including State Attorney R.J. Larizza--who toured the CAC's new facility in Bunnell, where the center pledged it would provide rape exams to adult victims. The pledge proved hollow. (© FlaglerLive)

The Children Advocacy Center’s promise in July to provide rape-crisis exams to adults in Flagler and Volusia counties turned out to be relatively hollow, and was followed by an ultimatum that the CAC would get out of the business altogether by June, triggering a furiously critical response from State Attorney R.J. Larizza, Sheriff Manfre and other local top cops.

14 For ’14: What Will Command
Florida’s Attention This Year

January 5, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 5 Comments

From the governor’s race to the economy to gambling to common core and the continuing battles over health care, here are some of the issues that will dominate the political landscape in the year ahead, some of which focusing the nation’s eyes on Florida yet again.

Florida Hospital Flagler CEO: State Must Extend Medicaid to Working Poor

January 4, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 15 Comments

The Florida Legislature still has the opportunity this year to draw down $51 billion in federal dollars already sent to Washington to help pay the cost of health insurance for those who cannot afford it, argues Floridfa Hospital Flagler CEO Ken Mattison.

Volusia-Flagler Non-Profit Hosting Annual Eating-Disorder Symposium on Feb. 15

January 3, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

COPE–Community Outreach for the Prevention of Eating Disorders–is hosting its annual public health symposium for education, awareness and prevention of eating disorders, Saturday, Feb. 15, at Renew Yoga Studio at 220 S. Beach Street in Daytona Beach.

Despite Florida’s Resistance, A New Era Of Health Insurance Begins for Millions

January 3, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 3 Comments

Thousands of previously uninsured Floridians woke up Wednesday morning with peace of mind for the first time in years. More than half of Florida’s nearly 4 million uninsured are projected to qualify for coverage through the Marketplace. Another million would qualify if the Florida Legislature would permit it.

Obamacare Dilemma:
High Deductibles vs. “Huge Fear”

December 26, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 29 Comments

Going without insurance “is like gambling,” says a 43-year-old social worker. But the high deductibles of Affordable Care Act plans make them a hard sell, as the plans sold on the exchange are not as generous as employer-sponsored insurance.

Yes, That Too: Your Employee-Provided Health Insurance Costs Are Going Up in 2014

December 23, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 7 Comments

The new year will likely bring higher deductibles and co-payments, penalties for not joining wellness programs and smaller employer contributions toward family coverage, but Obamacare isn’t entirely to blame: it is only accelerating pre-existing conditions.

Marijuana Use Barely Up, Synthetic Drug Use Sharply Down, Along With Other Narcotics

December 18, 2013 | FlaglerLive | Leave a Comment

The use of synthetic marijuana products and bath salts dropped sharply in 2013 among students in middle and high school as students increasingly see the products as dangerous, according to the most authoritative annual drug and alcohol survey, with marijuana use up slightly but most other drugs showing declines.

Longing For Stormin’ Norman: How Obama’s Smugness Is Crippling His Leadership

December 12, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 27 Comments

There are leaders out there. The Obama administration administration has let us down by failing to find them. As a result, the task Barack Obama has left himself is to convince us that the Affordable Care Act is a winner, not a clunker.

Pam Bondi’s Pot Problem

December 6, 2013 | Pierre Tristam | 58 Comments

pam bondi pot problem amendment medical marijuana florida

It’s a matter of time before marijuana is legalized, for medical uses or not, even in Florida. But Attorney General Pam Bondi is doing her best to preserve a prohibition that relies on disinformation to benefit cops and jails at the expense of greater safety, less crime and more compassion, were marijuana to be legalized.

Medical Marijuana Tangles Up Florida Supreme Court Justices In Weeds of Words

December 5, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 10 Comments

The idea of medical marijuana technically isn’t at issue in the case. Instead, Attorney General Pam Bondi, legislative leaders and medical, law enforcement and business groups argue that the ballot title and summary that would appear on the ballot could deceive voters about the scope of the amendment.

Another Obamacare Surprise: Married Couples Not Eligible For Subsidies Given Single Filers

December 5, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 32 Comments

For middle class married couples who don’t have children, the subsidy cutoff is $62,000. If one spouse makes $30,000 and the other $40,000, they are ineligible for a subsidy when combined. But if they were just living together, each would be eligible for a subsidy.

Medicaid Gap: A Reporter Who Covers Obamacare But Doesn’t Qualify For It

December 4, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 7 Comments

The Supreme Court allowed states to opt out of the Medicaid expansion under Obamacare, as Florida did, but the law didn’t include subsidies for people in those states who earn less than the federal poverty level to buy coverage through the exchanges. They were supposed to be covered under Medicaid. And Medicaid is not there for them.

Palm Coast Couple Charged With Aggravated Child Abuse After Neglecting Broken Arm

December 2, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 13 Comments

Authorities learned that the couple allegedly had cruel means of disciplining the 3-year-old boy, including dousing the child in cold water for napping when he wasn’t supposed to, sitting the child by the front door, as punishment, for 10 to 60 minutes, “and twisting [the child] into a pretzel with legs behind [his] head, causing pain to the groin area,” according to the arrest report.

With 3 Weeks To Go, Consumers Fear Ending Up Without Health Coverage On New Year’s

December 2, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 14 Comments

The next three weeks are critical for consumers keen on getting health coverage as soon as the health law allows it on Jan. 1. People who desire coverage by then need to sign up in the new marketplaces no later than Dec. 23. Consumers can still enroll up to the end of March, but their coverage will begin later.

Despite $51 Billion For the Taking, Florida Unlikely to Expand Health Coverage in 2014

November 25, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 18 Comments

Consumer groups, hospitals and insurers are clamoring for Florida to take the $51 billion in federal funds that have been offered to the state over the next decade to provide health coverage to the working poor. But those who are tuned in politically — even those who desperately want it to happen — say it’s very unlikely in 2014.

Fire Demolishes House in Painter’s Hill and Jumps A1A to Island Estates Before It’s Stopped

November 24, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 11 Comments

A fire that started at about 3:15 this afternoon in a vacant, two-level house at 3518 North A1A, in Painter’s Hill, was fueled by 40 mph winds off the ocean and had quickly engulfed the structure in flames by the time firefighters arrived at the scene.

Republicans Fret as Motor Voter Law
Meets Obamacare

November 20, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 5 Comments

Twenty years ago, Congress passed a controversial law requiring states to allow people to register to vote when they applied for driver’s licenses or social services. That same law is bringing voter registration to the health insurance marketplaces, and again, it is expected to result in legal fights as Republicans fear it will drive up Democratic registrations.

Obamacare Will Survive. Obama and Democrats, Maybe Not So Much.

November 17, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 36 Comments

The law’s rocky debut has refocused attention on whether Obama, intellectually gifted though he may be, was ready to be the country’s chief executive. It may also decide which party is in control after 2016.

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