Roll all summer with a classic dunkins savory pork roll breakfast sandwich is back. Crave it while you can. America runs on dunkin. Dear fellow citizen, i know what its like to live a full life. But living for today doesnt mean forgetting about tomorrow. Most people spend more time planning their vacation than they do for retirement. But i like to think of retirement like its a 30year vacation. So how are you going to get there . Dont worry. It just takes some planning. And i can help. So if you have a question about retirement, ask me. Sincerely, Bernard Tynes fellow vacationer and fellow citizen. Phil mickelson is in the rough patch. Mickelson is in the worst stretch of his career, his last win, how about this, the british open, three years ago. Rory mcilroy is not having a great time, breaks his club, mcilroy two over, tied for 18. And phil milk old son in a better mood on 13, takes a two shot lead but falls apart on 17. He bogeys while Henrik Stenson birdies, 17, one shot lead, ste
Dydi in august, 1. 7 million persons were marginally attached to the labor force. These individuals were not in the labor force, wanted to and were available to work but had looked for a job sometime in the prior 12 months. A few of the numbers beyond the topline numbers. We want to talk about job prospects in your part of the country. Underemployed, if you are unemployed and if you stopped looking. Prospects,t and job a subject that came up in the president s weekly address and the republican weekly address. We will start with Bradley Byrne of alabama. He was traveling around his district for the last couple of , talking about how government could help local efforts when it comes to unemployment and poverty. He was in theodore, ala woulu gave weekl publ addres we [vidp]om dist, talkth t trapin proy. Sore strg wi soave jot si, they comom aorts o backgrand of th shoulcognizat eve job to nougney to li me of st wfor th fit ate ortionee huingsith realt and proo peopt ly aer pern lo meon th
Tv after words tv program. She discuss the book the shift in which she discuss health care. Host im going to start by maybe reading a few sentences out of your first chapter. Guest that sounds great. Host my fellow rns combination of snark, humor, Technical Skills and clinical smarts were like me to put our shoulders to the rock that is modern health care and every day push it up the hill. Guest yes. Host talk a little bit about what our Current Health system, how challenging it is to be a nurse in the system today . Guest that image came to me because i really feel like that at work that theres this giant rock, we come in every day and we have to move the rock to the top of the hill and the next ship you come back and same rock, same job because health care is so complicated now and not really focused very well on coordination that it can often take a tremendous amount of time and energy for this very basic ordinary things to happen. For example, one of the patients in the book is mis
Correctional health care in 2011 which was about 1 in 6 of their entire correctional budget. And that level of spending shouldnt be surprising. This is not a healthy population. That includes a loent of folks with chronic conditions, with Mental Illness, with addiction disorders, and its getting older as the population ages. Ad so its not surprising that states are trying a whole range of different strategies to get r handle on Correctional Health a spending, everything from contracting with third partiesag to deliver the care to having more services delivered on site to taking advantage of new Health Coverage opportunities for inmates. So today wereto going to take a look at how well those cov strategies and some others are working and what kinds of policy changes might be helpful to improve both the quality and the value of the care that this population receives. And as we examine these issues, were pleased to have as a partner in todays program the centine corporation which contract
In the district. And a onesentence question. Does the work they do in prison, does that count towards medicare . Social security, medicare. No, it does not. There is a statutory prohibition wow. For medicare paying for any Services Provided behind bars. Thst also a statutory provision that if youre on parole or probation, you cannot receive medicare benefit. On the medicaid side, theres something known as the inmate exception, which goes back again to the original finding of medicaid, which states if youre an inmate of a Public Institution as the exact statutory language, you cannot receive medicaid benefits at all. So again, one of the challenges going back to my comment about islands, and what im hearing you say is we need to figure out creatively how we build bridges to those islands. Obviously, medical records is a part of it. Thinking about bringing standards of care that medicaid brings is another part of it. But at this point, were all very much in the process of understanding i