Archive for the 'info sources' Category

Anthropology — significance for authentic change

I asked one of the anthropology newslists to publish Ann Dunham’s bibliography. In the meantime, this article provides a bit of context for the current election season.

“Anthropological perspective” is difficult to define, but if one is lucky enough to be exposed to it, it proves invaluable for running corporations or countries or non-profits or farm co-ops. Anthropology is the comprehensive, comparative study of people in space and time.

Holistic perspective of the environment (change with time)

Holistic perspective of the environment (change with time)

Obama’s mother’s work, focus of seminar

Posted on: Friday, September 12, 2008
By Dan Nakaso

Sen. Barack Obama’s approach to economic and foreign policy most likely was influenced by the research his mother conducted decades ago through the University of Hawai’i.

Obama’s mother, Stanley Ann Dunham, who died of cancer in 1995, earned her doctorate at the University of Hawai’i while helping craftsmen in Indonesia and Africa get small loans to improve their lives and their villages, and ended up becoming an expert in “micro lending.”

Dunham’s work — from an anthropology undergraduate to her doctoral dissertation — will be discussed today at a free seminar at UH called, “Dr. Stanley Ann Dunham: An Extraordinary Woman and Her Work.”

UH professor emeritus Alice G. Dewey, Dunham’s graduate anthropology adviser, who will be speaking in today’s program, said Dunham “made it clear that you had to understand what they (the people you hope to help) are doing and for what. The implication for Sen. Obama is that if you’re going to do something intended to help somebody, you better understand the implications and whether it’s suited to the economics of that place. Just throwing money at a problem doesn’t do it. You really have to understand what you’re doing in order to help people.”


“However this election turns out, it’s important for us to focus on her in a way we haven’t to date. She is a significant figure in women’s history in Hawai’i and we need to take a look at her and be proud of her as a UH-Manoa student and show our female students that they can do anything.”

Much of the discussion will focus on the scholarly aspects of Dunham’s work in Indonesia — “her knowledge of Indonesian craftsmanship and her efforts in micro-financing,” said one of the organizers…

The implications are profound for potential U.S. policies around the world, Dewey said….

In Indonesia, Dunham home-schooled Obama and gave birth to his sister, Maya Soetoro-Ng, who now teaches at La Pietra School and plans to be in the audience at today’s presentation.

“There was a recognition that we could change the world by helping as many people as possible in the lower economic tiers to empower themselves so they could have some decision-making power over their own lives,” Soetoro-Ng said.

“Our mother’s work greatly influenced my brother’s commitment to service and to inclusiveness and to grass-roots democracy, obviously democratic decision making. Those commitments were certainly imbedded in his list of priorities, in part because of her example.”…

Her life of service is something to which we should all aspire. [...]

read more

Ann’s most lasting professional legacy was to help build the microfinance program in Indonesia, which she did from 1988 to ‘92—before the practice of granting tiny loans to credit-poor entrepreneurs was an established success story. Her anthropological research into how real people worked helped inform the policies set by the Bank Rakyat Indonesia, says Patten, an economist who worked there. “I would say her work had a lot to do with the success of the program,” he says. Today Indonesia’s microfinance program is No. 1 in the world in terms of savers, with 31 million members, according to Microfinance Information eXchange Inc., a microfinance-tracking outfit.

Analytical anthropology includes the study and application of biocultural variation and adaptation in complex, non-linear, dynamic systems (simply, you and yours). We’re very good at working with communities (nuclear physicists or public health epidemiologists or seal hunters or small town mayors but not dinosaurs, silly. Those are paleontologists.) to accurately assess difficult problems and create sustainable, innovative solutions. Anthropologists, not afraid to skin a moose with a stone knife, explain the half-life of stable carbon to bureaucrats, diagnose the organizational culture of foreign enterprises, or redesign hockey rinks for efficiency.


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Ask the President / VP science questions: Your choice matters!

from the ever wonderful The Why Files — http://whyfiles.org (University of Wisconsin)

Today’s date: 11 Sep 2008

Questioning candidates
[28 Aug 2008] The candidates are skirting issues related to environment, energy and science policy. Heard promising plans for greener energy, solid science advice, or coping with the decline of oil? We neither… (More…)

Presidential science questions: Your choice matters!

Sarah Palin content

[additions]
Cama’i visitors.

Local results for ‘Palin’ using the search box. You may also use the site search tag in each post, Sarah+Palin.

WordPress.com doesn’t have the best internal search engine, but I’m usually good about using the tags correctly. If you want to know more about Alaska and Alaska Natives, including Eskimo people, especially Yup’ik people of the Yukon Kuskokwim Nushagak region, try using the categories in the sidebar or the site search tags at the bottom of each post.

The Nushagak River is in the Bristol Bay region (Dillingham is the hub. The link opens in a new window) from which Todd Palin’s family comes.

Our terrific state-wide public radio network is offering a reprise of their hour-long show about Governor Palin. Listen here, AK: Sarah Palin, Revisited

revised 2008-08-31 Because Gov. Palin has offered her credentials as commander of the National Guard, here is the category for related posts here– Eskimo Guard For those who have read several news stories quoting the Alaska Business Journal Monthly story, March 2007 (? looking for the original article), the end of 2006, on the Governor’s response to the Iraq surge, may be interested in this post, What impact will Iraq war call-up have from June 2006. State governors don’t usually have much involvement in US wars, and naturally would be more interested in state affairs. But this US war has called up our National Guardsmen.

revised 2008-09-04

“Alaska is on the map” is the recent slogan. Actually, Alaska has always been on the map. In fact, all over the map and maps. Click the category maps to find out where all we’ve been put now.

Other reasonable writings (i.e., respectful and insightful) –
Read Writing Raven on Sarah Palin and Alaska Native Issues

Mudflats on photos of Wasilla, church in Wasilla, global photogs and newsmedia in Wasilla, et al. Sarah Palin’s Preacher Problem. End Times Coming?

Shannyn Moore, also an Alaska woman, daughter of teachers, “Bitter-Proud”? (hard to read theme so use your own style sheet)

Andrew Halcro, Palin for VP: The S.W.O.T Analysis, who keeps up with bailouts of local dairies, “troopergate”, Governor’s gasline to be built by foreigners.

Good grief. I have overlooked the O’Folks off their Rocker much earlier post  over at –

This is a good summary, from Slate. The Sarah Palin FAQ Everything you ever wanted to know about the Republican vice presidential nominee. By Derek Thompson Posted Thursday, Sept. 4, 2008, at 5:39 PM ET

2008-09-10 Michael Carey has consistently provided balanced and accurate information. Listen to him at NPR,

Related posts specific to Palin–

http://ykalaska.wordpress.com/2008/08/29/where-is-palin-and-bridge-to-nowhere-alaska/
http://ykalaska.wordpress.com/2008/08/31/todd-palin-sarah-palins-husband-and-rural-alaska-living/
http://ykalaska.wordpress.com/2008/08/29/where-is-wasilla-gov-sarah-palins-residence/
http://ykalaska.wordpress.com/2008/08/30/sarah-palin-content/
Where is… Sarah Palin foreign experience (Russia)


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Where is… Wasilla (Gov. Sarah Palin’s residence)

News media have described Wasilla, formerly mayored by Sarah Palin, with population size all over the place. For the latest population figures and other data, press that Alaska state flag in the sidebar or go here–

http://www.commerce.state.ak.us/dca/commdb/CIS.cfm?Comm_Boro_Name=Wasilla

Location map of WAH-sill-ah Alaska Location map of WAH-sill-ah Alaska

2008-09-04 Related posts specific to Palin info

http://ykalaska.wordpress.com/2008/08/29/where-is-palin-and-bridge-to-nowhere-alaska/
http://ykalaska.wordpress.com/2008/08/31/todd-palin-sarah-palins-husband-and-rural-alaska-living/
http://ykalaska.wordpress.com/2008/08/29/where-is-wasilla-gov-sarah-palins-residence/
http://ykalaska.wordpress.com/2008/08/30/sarah-palin-content/


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7,028 (2007 DCCED Certified Population)

More rural Alaska solid waste health resources

Lynn Zender posted a series of valuable resources on solid waste management and dumpsite health risk studies in rural Alaska as a comment here on the other site Biocultural Sciences. Because comments from there don’t get noted here, I’m making a post to bring these resources to your attention.

Lynn mentions SWAN

I thought I had referred folks to SWAN which is a highly useful discussion site and resource. My apologies because it is very well done. The site is sponsored by CCTHITA (Central Council of the Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska)


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Where is… latest diseased animal

from the incomparable
http://www.promedmail.org ProMED-mail is a program of the International Society for Infectious Diseases http://www.isid.org

I have mentioned the Wildlife Disease Center before

The map format will be a great complement to the
global human H5N1 disease map mentioned here
(Where is… Bethel and 2007 bird flu) and to the
MIT HealthMap of the latest alerts on infectious disease around the world

Web tool puts wildlife diseases on the map
Date: Fri 2 May 2008 Source: US Department of the Interior, US Geological Survey (USGS) Office of Communication]
http://www.usgs.gov/newsroom/article.asp?ID=1928

- ——————————————
A new on-line map makes it possible, for the 1st time, to track disease outbreaks around the world that threaten the health of wildlife, domestic animals, and people.

Updated daily, the map displays pushpins marking stories of wildlife diseases such as West Nile virus, avian influenza, chronic wasting disease, and monkeypox. Users can browse the latest reports of nearly 50 diseases and other health conditions, such as pesticide and lead poisoning, by geographic location. Filters make it easy to focus on different disease types, affected species, countries, and dates.

The map is a product of the Wildlife Disease Information Node (WDIN), a 5-year-old collaboration between UW-Madison and 2 federal agencies, the National Wildlife Health Center and the National Biological Information Infrastructure, that are part of the USGS. WDIN is housed within the university’s Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies and the USGS.

“If you click on the name of a particular disease, it takes you to our main website and does a quick search of everything that we have on that topic,” says Cris Marsh, a librarian who oversees the wildlife disease news services for the WDIN. …The WDIN gathers news from more than 20 on-line sources and makes it available in a number of handy formats, from a Wildlife Disease News Digest at to desktop widgets, e-mail, and RSS feeds.

Subscription information for these news delivery services can be found at http://wildlifedisease.nbii.gov/wdindigest.html … “People who collect data about wildlife diseases don’t currently have an established communication network, which is something we’re working to improve,” says Dein. “But just seeing what’s attracting attention in the news gives us a much better picture of what’s out there than we’ve ever had before.”

Concerns about the emergence and spread of diseases that can pass between species have forged new links in recent years between wildlife health, human health, and domestic animal health professionals. “It all ties in together, the ‘One-World, One-Health’ idea,” says Marsh. “The West Nile virus acted as one of the catalysts for that connection. People in different areas in the eastern US began to see isolated incidences of dead and dying crows that seemed abnormally high, but nobody knew other areas were experiencing the same thing.” Because West Nile virus also affects humans and other mammals, it became apparent to scientists that disease outbreaks of this kind need to be addressed as quickly as possible, explains Marsh. Outbreaks of monkeypox and highly pathogenic avian influenza soon afterward underscored the importance of linking information about emerging diseases across all species.

Contact information Chris Marsh cmarsh ATusgsDOTgov Joshua Dein fjdein ATusgsDOTgov US Department of the Interior, US Geological Survey Office of Communication
119 National Center Reston, VA 20192 USA


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MayDay for heirlooms, heritage, and museums preparedness

MayDay May 1 heritage preparednessWith spring and break-up just around the corner (please, please, please!) one thing we often forget until too late are family heirlooms, photos, records, manuscripts and so on. Heritage Emergency National Task Force special day is aimed at more formal institutions, but every home or tribal office would benefit from considering emergency preparedness for tangible cultural resources.

If you are in Alaska, contact the state museum in Juneau which has a grant to help local museums with preservation and documentation efforts. Bruce Kato, Chief Curator (bruce DOTkato AT alaska DOTgov),
Telephone: (907) 465-4866, http://www.museums.state.ak.us

April is also Alaska Archaeology Month. This year’s theme is archaeology associated with travel along the National Historic Iditarod Trail.

Archives, libraries, museums, and historic preservation organizations across America are setting aside May 1 to participate in MayDay, a national effort to protect collections from disasters…. Here are some ideas from the Heritage Emergency National Task Force:

  • * If you have a disaster plan, dust it off and bring it up to date.
  • * If you don’t have a plan, make a timeline for developing one.
  • * Get to know your local firefighters and police. Invite them to tour your institution and give pointers on safety and preparedness. A poster outlining tips for working with emergency responders ( www.heritagepreservation.org/catalog/) is available from the Task Force.
  • * Identify the three biggest risks to your collection or building (such as leaking water pipe, heavy snow, or power failure) and outline steps to mitigate them.
  • * Conduct a building evacuation drill and evaluate the results.
  • * Update your staff contact information and create a wallet-size version of your emergency contact roster. See the Pocket Response PlanTM (PRePTM) at www.statearchivists.org/prepare/framework/prep.htm.
  • * Eliminate hazards such as storage in hallways, blocked fire exits, or improper storage of paints or solvents.
  • * Provide staff with easily accessible disaster response information, such as www.heritageemergency.org.
  • * Join forces with nearby institutions and agree to assist each other in case of a disaster.
  • * Establish a method of identifying objects that are most important to your mission, irreplaceable, or most fragile, making evacuation simpler when disaster hits.
  • * Register for a free course to learn how your institution fits into existing emergency response protocols. A list is available at www.heritagepreservation.org/lessons/courses.html

Heritage Preservation is offering its popular Field Guide to Emergency Response and Emergency Response and Salvage Wheel at special MayDay sale prices from April 15 to May 31.

Related posts–
Cangerlaagpiit (Epidemics) — historical lessons
Alaska History reading list
Alaska history books
Alaska Territorial Guard celebrates 60th anniversary
Lydia T. Black 1925 to 2007
Letters from 1918 SW Alaska British Columbia
Dog-Team Doctor 2
another sneeze video
Jesse Lee Home, Alaska and the pandemic of 1919
More historical resources (Brevig Mission)
More historical pandemic resources (Michigan archives)
Online curriculum for Alaska high school students about their state


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MRSA blog

Maryn McKenna who provided valuable references to historical pandemic flu (1918-1919), is currently working on a book about Methicillin-resistant staph infections, MRSA.

She’s using a web log for her research. This allows us to track some of the latest research findings through her, but also allows interaction with readers as she is developing the book.

This blog is the virtual whiteboard for my new book, SUPERBUG: The Rise of Drug-Resistant Staph and the Danger of a World Without Antibiotics, coming in 2009 from Free Press. Whether you’re a MRSA researcher or a MRSA victim — or simply a major disease geek — I’m interested in your leads, thoughts, comments and stories. Watch this space for drafts and details as SUPERBUG moves forward.

I’m a freelance writer and author specializing in public health, medicine and health policy. I write features for national magazines and news stories for an infectious-disease website. In addition to this new book about the rise of drug-resistant staph around the world, I’m working on a multi-year research project on emergency room overcrowding and stress. … I’m interested in hearing from researchers, victims and disease geeks; all tips, thoughts, leads and personal stories are welcome. For more about me, check my website in the blogroll, along with other important sites about public health and disease. Let’s get started.

MRSA is now part of our tundra environment, along with various respiratory diseases (RSV, pneumonias) and skin infections (impetigo). This makes us part of the larger world– which we have been, of course, although some readers of the Anchorage Daily News seem blinded to the concept (Respiratory infections in Bush raise alarm : comments). MRSA is an example of evolution, an inadvertent selection by the medical system against the more benign or easier to kill (therefore less dangerous) microbes by killing them off with antibiotics. This allows the resistant microbes to take over. It also allows the resistant microbes to live outside the healthcare system in the community.

See previous posts,

It would be interesting to apply some of the understanding about MRSA to that of the higher rate of infectious diseases related to sanitation in our region. Inadequate clean water supplies are part, but not all, of the problem suggested by the recently published study. The region focussed on in the research is also served by just one health corporation which in the past, at least, has used antibiotics freely.

Also,

Medical photos from DermNet of Cellulitis
Furuncles Carbuncles (boils)
Staphylococcal Folliculitis (boils)


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Students guide to the medical literature

Another excellent reference from BHIC (see sidebar, http://nnlm.gov/mcr/bhic/?p=2711

A Students Guide to the Medical Literature
A Students Guide to the Medical Literature (by K McLucas U Colorado HSC) http://grinch.uchsc.edu/sg/ includes a Tutorial outlining a 4-step approach to reading medical literature ; Search Strategies with links to the best web sites; A Guide to Critical Appraisal of journal articles with step-by-step explanation of the “User’s Guide approach ; An interactive Glossary with over 150 statistical terms hyperlinked to the text ; Calculators for finding relevant outcome measures from a study ; and a Student’s Guide Pocket Version to use on your Palm or Pocket PC [posted in: HEALTH COMMUNICATION Web sites #1, 2008, compiled by Marcia Zorn, MA, MLS; Lists are Archived by the Coalition for Health Communication at

related entries here–
Pew Report: Online Health Search 2006

Quick guide to critical evaluation of information sources

Getting Results from Your Experts

Hoaxes Rumors — lookup

Calling cards of quackery

Medical Reference for Non-Medical Librarians


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Updates on bird flu results, USA AK (HEDDS)

HPAI Early Detection Data System (HEDDS)
It’s only been just a little while since the official bird flu testing results in the USA have been provided in a much easier format to receive and review. This is very good news. The mailing list is one way to review the latest data. Another is to use their RSS feeds.

Just as a reminder–
HPAI is highly pathogenic avian influenza (particularly the H5N1 strain)
LPAI is low pathogenic avian influenza
“Bird flu” of the pandemic concern (H5N1) HAS been detected in wild birds in the USA and North America. It is of low pathogenicity (LPAI).

Complex Bird Flu Testing summary
Dirty Jobs in Bethel, goose butts
Sampling Bird Cloaca
Avian Influenza among NorAm Waterfowl Hunters and Wildlife Professionals

National HPAI Early Detection Data System (HEDDS) Update Monday, Feb 18, 2008
This email contains text only. To view map and for easy-to-read formatting, go to:
http://wildlifedisease.nbii.gov/documents/National HPAI Early Detection Data System (HEDDS) Sample Totals Update Feb 18 2008.pdf (pdf file)

**Note: After 30 days, this link will no longer be available. You are welcome to save a copy locally for research or education purposes.

Totals for 2007

New samples with test results added since February 11 for the 2007 Sampling
Session: 187

Total samples tested and reported for 2007: 84,530

Highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza virus has NOT been detected in these
samples.

Totals for 2006

As of February 11, 2008, no new samples with test results were added to
HEDDS.

Total samples tested and reported for 2006: 164,553

Highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza virus has NOT been detected in these
samples.

Surveillance news

Feb 15, 2008: The LPAI H5N1 table has been updated with information on results from a sample collected from a American black duck in Tuscola, MI on Nov 4, 2007.

Feb 15, 2008: The LPAI H5N1 table has been updated with information on results from a sample collected from a Mallard in Erie, PA on Oct 29, 2007.

Feb 15, 2008: The LPAI H5N1 table has been updated with information on results from a sample collected from a Mallard (#1) in Kent, DE on Nov 19, 2007.

Feb 15, 2008: The LPAI H5N1 table has been updated with information on results from a sample collected from a Mallard (#2) in Kent, DE on Nov 19, 2007.

Feb 15, 2008: The LPAI H5N1 table has been updated with information on results from a sample collected from a American black duck in Kent, DE on Nov 20, 2007.

Feb 15, 2008: 187 samples and tests were added to HEDDS for 2007. Total is now 84,530.

Feb 13, 2008: The LPAI H5N1 results table has been updated with information on samples collected on Jan 29, 2008 from a Unknown in Jefferson county, AR.

Additional information on Surveillance News items can be found at the following links:

USDA Avian Influenza Homepage -
http://www.usda.gov/wps/portal/usdahome?navtype=SU&navid=AVIAN_INFLUENZA

DOI News - http://www.doi.gov/news.html

Other links: This message is from the HEDDS-News mailing list.

HEDDS
http://wildlifedisease.nbii.gov/ai/

LPAI H5N1 Results Table
http://wildlifedisease.nbii.gov/ai/LPAITable.pdf (pdf file)

National Wildlife Health Center - Avian Influenza News
http://www.nwhc.usgs.gov/disease_information/avian_influenza/avian_influenza_news.jsp

Wildlife Disease Information Node – Select Avian Influenza News Sources
http://wildlifedisease.nbii.gov/diseaseresource.jsp?disease=Avian%20Influenza&section=News&pagemode=submit

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

The HEDDS-News Mailing List is a component of the NBII Wildlife Disease Information Node

See related posts–
Where is… bird test results
Results Birds and Influenza from Asia into Alaska
Frozen fecal bird flu types
Results: 2006 Alaska Avian Influenza Surveillance
another result on our birds
Where is… Bethel and 2007 bird flu
Accessible bird results
results, maybe
LPAI (H5N1) in mallards, confirmed from Maryland
White House: Lesser Bird Flu May Be Here
YKHC: H5N1 bird test results
Villagers living in bird flu’s flight path
Experts will test birds for signs of avian flu


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