American Health News and
Wellness Report Newsletter
Prevention is a Cure (c)
 
December, 2009 - Vol 12 Issue 2
Lumosity logoAHA Masthead Heart
In This Issue
AHA IN THE NEWS: ABC WATCH IT
THE CURE FOR PEANUT ALLERGIES
RESTARTING YOUR SINGLE LIFE
FIGHTING HOSPITAL INFECTIONS
SALUTE TO VETERANS LUNCHEON
PACKING TO SUPPORT SOLDIERS JAN 14th 2010
Join Our Mailing List!
Quick Links
 
 
 
 
ELF CAMPAIGN
Register and be part of American Health's ELF Project.
 
ELF Campaing begins.
 
West Boca Medical Center
December 7th,  5:30pm
 
Homeward Residences
December 9th, 6:00pm
 
Boca Christmas Parade
December 9th, 8:00pm
 
Master ELF at 561-361-9091
Elf 2009 
 
 
Greetings!

HAPPY HOLIDAYS
 
Send us email addresses of friends, relatives and neighbors who you want to give a gift of "Health" and we will send a "Holiday Card" to them from you and they'll get 52 weeks of our Gold Medal "American Health News & Wellness Report Newsletter free.
 
Week 2 December schedule
 
Sunday, December 6th 2:00pm
Sunday Scrabble Club
Spanish River Library in the Cafe
Facilitator:  Neil Lavikoff
561 302 2760 
 
Monday, December 7th 5:30pm
Elf Campaign
"ELVES GONE WILD"
First Campaign is at:
WEST BOCA MEDICAL CENTER (HOSPITAL)
5:30 PM, 441 below Glades in Boca Raton
bring your SONGBOOKS
Call Elf Headquarters: 561 361 9091 
 
Monday, December 7th 7:30pm
American Lecture Society
"Restarting Your Single Life"
with Paul Henry Barber
Boca Community Center
150 Crawford Blvd, Boca Raton
 
 
Wednesday, December 9th 6:00pm
Elf Campaign
"ELVES GONE WILD"
Homeward Residences
9591 Yamato Road, Boca Raton
Call Elf Headquarters: 561 361 9091
 
Wednesday, December 9th 8:00pm
ELVES ON PARADE
"Boca Christmas Parade"
on Federal Highway
Meet up with Elves at Dunkin Donuts & Baskin Robins at 8pm we will all parade with Santa
 
Always check the calendar for times and location
Call the American Health Association for any coupon offering.
 
President American Health Association
J. Robert Gordon
In the news: ABC's 11 o'clock  
 
News video you must see.
 
ABC's 11 o'clock news, featured Robert Gordon's recent trip to the war zone and the Orphans of War project.  Congratulations!! 
 
 
 
 
Visit our website or donate by linking to the sites below:
Peanuts: The Cure for Peanut Allergies
 
Peanut pic 1
DURHAM, N.C. (Ivanhoe Newswire) -- 12-million Americans suffer from food allergies. More than three-million of them are allergic to peanuts.  While there are drugs to treat an allergic reaction, there's nothing that can fix food allergies for good.  Now, doctors are using peanuts themselves to treat allergies. The goal is to cure the potentially life-threatening condition. Severe peanut allergies made nine-year old Noah Schaffer feel like an outsider. "I had to sit at a different table than other people because they had peanut butter, and I couldn't sit by my friends," Schaffer told Ivanhoe.
His mom worried more about his health than his popularity. Just one-tenth of a peanut would cause a violent reaction. "His lips swelled," Robyn Smith, Noah's mom, told Ivanhoe. "His ears swelled up. His eyes started to close up, and he started to get hives all over his body."

Noah enrolled in a Duke University study to retrain his immune system. The new treatment mixes a tiny amount of peanut powder -- about one-thousandth of a peanut -- into a child's food. Gradually, they increase the dose over time.

"We see the first changes to the immune system happen about six months into treatment and then further changes happen beyond a couple years of the treatment," Wesley Burks, M.D., Professor of Pediatrics at Duke University Medical Center described to Ivanhoe.
 peanut pic 2
In the four-year study, 89-percent of the kids with severe peanut allergies could eat up to 15 peanuts. 12 percent had to drop out because they couldn't handle the treatment, but another 25 percent lost their peanut allergies altogether in another part of the study. Noah is one of the success stories. Peanut pic 3
 

 
 
"He was able to eat 40 peanuts, two tablespoons of peanut butter, plus peanut produce, and he had no reaction whatsoever," Smith exclaimed. Now, he keeps his immunity up by eating a daily dose of his favorite treat, Reese's peanut butter cups. It is a life-changing experience for a boy and his family who now has a much higher tolerance and much lower anxiety.

Doctor Burks says this was a medically-supervised study, and parents should not try the approach at home. Doctors at Duke University and Arkansas children's hospital are still enrolling kids in more peanut allergy studies. They believe there will be a treatment for peanut allergies in the next two or three years.

Duke University Medical Center
Restarting your single life
 Paul Henry Barber
Join Paul Henry Barber
Life Coach - Corporate Trainer as he leads our Singles Society.
 
During December on Monday night Mr. Barber will facilitate a session that address building and maintaining healthy relationships, finding life long partners, how to leave your past baggage behind and help you solve those personal issues that could destroy your relationships.
 
 
Boca Community Center at 7:30pm Boca Raton, Florida 33432
Fighting Hospital infections
 
Hospital pic1GAINESVILLE, Fla. (Ivanhoe Newswire) -- Hand-washing is our greatest weapon in the fight against hospital-acquired infections, but a recent study found hospital workers wash their hands less than 50-percent of the time after direct contact with patients. Guidelines and quality checks work to a point, but researchers are turning to the first-ever real-time monitoring system for hand-washing.

Gregory Gardner thought his father was out of the woods after a successful colon cancer operation until a five-month battle with the infection c-diff took his life. "It left a big empty space," Gardner told Ivanhoe.
 
Pat Mastors also lost her father to a hospital-acquired infection. "He went in for neck surgery, and two days after the surgery, his intestines ruptured," Mastors explained to Ivanhoe.
 
They're one of 99-thousand Americans who die from the infections each year. Deaths that experts say are far too preventable. "Conservative estimates indicate that the cost of hospital-acquired infections is at least $30 billion per year in the United States," Don Dennis, MD, professor for the departments of anesthesiology, pharmacology and psychiatry at the University of Florida in Gainesville told Ivanhoe. "About half of the infections are attributable to improper hand-washing."
 

Hospital pic 2To help remedy the problem, researchers are testing a technology inspired by alcohol detection tests that sniffs out good hand hygiene. After a nurse or doctor washes their hands, a sensor communicates with a special badge. When they get within five feet of a patient, a monitor near the bed reads the badge and flashes green. If they pass the 90-second window before seeing a patient, the badge vibrates.

"The idea is that as soon as you wash your hands, you go immediately into the care of the patient," Richard J. Melker, M.D., Ph.D., professor of anesthesiology, pediatrics and biomedical engineering at the University of Florida in Gainesville explained to Ivanhoe.
Healthcare workers report the system is making a difference. For some, change comes too late. "I wouldn't want to see any other family go through what we went through," Gardner said.
"We don't deserve to die from infections," Mastors said.

Hospital pic 3It is working to make hospitals places of healing, not hurting. The soap-sniffing technology just went on the market in October. In the future, developers hope to put it into use at nursing homes and restaurants to slow the spread of bacteria and infection. One of the dirtiest places in the hospital might be on your doctor's tie. One study found almost half of ties worn by clinicians harbored disease-causing bacteria.
"Salute To Veterans Luncheon" Celebrated 
Luncheon Vet 2009
On Veterans Day
 
A patriotic salute by members of The United
States Marine Drum and Fife Corp, followed by A Presentation of the Colors by members of The United States Marine Corps Honor Guard, and the singing of the National Anthem, led by soloist Kendra Fulmer, opened the festive 10th Annual "Salute to Veteran's Luncheon."
 
Jim Schlafani, Steve Laine, Teddy Bear, Bo Hildreth
 
Students from the ROTC program at Atlantic High School in Delray Beach were on hand to greet over 200 guests, as they arrived at the Boca Raton Country Club.

Following Lunch, The United States Marine Corp League awarded Manuel "Manny" Moreno the 2009 Veteran of the Year Award and Jesus Pintos, USMC Ret. the Palm Beach County Volunteer of the Year Award. Palm Beach County Student of the Year for 2009 was Erin Locey of the West Boca Raton High School for her dedication to the Orphans of War Campaign for the Orphans of Iraq. Pat Murphy, CBS12 Sports Newscaster and Luncheon M/C, announced the Tenth Annual American Senior Achievement Awards. The awards were presented by J. Robert Gordon.
 
luncheon pic 2Jesus "Manny" Moreno JR (USMC),
Jesus Pintos, (USMC) Ret.
J. Robert Gordon
 
Honorees included: Marshall & Esther Schneider for helping Cancer patients; Jeannette Molina, Farmworker Coordinating Council; Betty Mulligan, Literacy Program Advocate; Ann Fonta, Annie Appleseed Project; Thomas Arth, Volunteer, Children's Home Society; and Barbara McCormick, for her Career in Pioneering Photojournalism in Palm Beach County.
 
Adding to the enjoyment of the affair were Jitter-bug dancers Tina Livanos and Derek Morison, and a presentation by Gwen Herb, Author and Veteran Stewardess.
Packing to Support our Soldiers in Iraq
 C.I.A Logo
Packing for our Support Our Soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan from 10:00 a.m. to noon monthly at our Delray warehouse.  The next packing is January 14th, 2010
 
Call 561-361- 9091 to register to help our brave men and women in uniform.
 
Ten thousand (10,000) gifts will be packed.  Did you know we already shipped 1.3 million presents to our troops, more than all civilian community groups combined in this country.  We have 7 Medals, Citiations and Commendations from Army, Navy, Air Force and the Marine Corps for our efforts in the "Surge" and winning the hearts and minds of the innocents of war in both countries.
 
We welcome you to join Citizen's in Action and/or raise funds so we can make a difference to millions of children in Iraq & Afghanistan and worldwide with our various charities including Orphans of War, Victims of War, Orphans of HIV-AIDs in Africa and Orphans of Hope in Central & South America. thehealthsociety@aol.com to join.
FREE
WITH EACH NEW AMERICAN HEALTH MEMBERSHIP 
 
ONE FREE Sunday Brunch Club LUNCH or DINNER DURING 2010
100% of every dollar goes to service the charities programs and services here in Palm Beach County and around the globe Not one cent in 8 years has ever gone to salaries, of any kind, to anyone. We are, from top to bottom all volunteers in service to the community.
MISSION STATEMENT
The American Health Society is a distinguished 10 year old multi-award winning preventative public health & wellness 501(c)(3) charity whose mission is in preventative healthcare, mental wellness, health education, literacy and advocacy aimed at preventing lifestyle based illnesses, diseases and the frailties of aging. 
 
We have a strong "Social Green Philosophy" of Humanitarian  Service through our American Volunteer Corps which has a global outreach in 46 countries with members in 37 US States.

J. Robert Gordon - CEO and Founder
American Health Association
561-361-9091