Thursday, May 28, 2009

Wellness Center Fitness Boot Camp Beginning June 2009



If you've ever considered kicking your workout into high gear, the Memorial Hermann Wellness Center Boot Camp is an ideal option for you. This results-driven conditioning program is conducted in an indoor/outdoor environment, utilizing a military-style format and the most progressive, innovative and creative fitness exercises.
This class features fast and furious workouts to condition your body into optimum condition. Dynamic and different every day, this program will keep you interested and motivated.

Boot Camp workouts include cardiovascular exercise, speed and endurance training, strength training, partner resistance exercises and agility work. Fitness games, group challenges, wheelbarrow races, medicine ball drills, plyometrics, box drills, fartleks and obstacle courses add a competitive and fun dimension to the sessions.
Session Info:
• Date: Monday-Friday, June 8 to July 3
• Time: 6 a.m. to 6:50 a.m.
• Location: All classes meet in the Wellness Center gymnasium, unless otherwise noted
• Cost (includes Pre-Program screening and Bod-Pod body fat measurement): $99 for Wellness Center Members and $149 for non-members

All Boot Camp participants must attend a pre-program screening and informational meeting on Saturday, May 30, from 8:30 to 10:30 a.m. in the Wellness Center gym. You will register at this time.
For more information contact the Wellness Center at 713.448.WELL or via e-mail at wellness.center@memorialhermann.org

Monday, May 11, 2009

Fake pee lands four in jail in Friendswood




By Chris Paschenko / The Daily News
FRIENDSWOOD, Texas — Kits containing synthetic urine, which are sold legally at smoke shops across the state, led to the April arrests of four men accused of using the kits to beat employment drug screens, authorities said.

Friendswood police stopped three of the four men on traffic violations and searched their cars. The fourth was allegedly loitering before police searched his car. Officers asked the men why they had synthetic urine kits.

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One similar kit purchased for $30 by The Daily News contains a 2-ounce bottle of yellow, odorless liquid with a strip thermometer attached, a hand warmer, rubber band and directions on how to give a “sample.”

Had the men admitted the fake urine was for medicinal purposes or intended as some kind of joke or twisted fetish, they might have been spared the indignity of handcuffs, a jail cell and scrounging up $1,000 bail.

But these four men, police allege, willingly offered the one explanation that violates the Texas health and safety code, constituting a Class B misdemeanor charge.

“Folks taken into custody told us they had to falsify a drug test based, most cases, on their places of employment,” Friendswood Police Chief Bob Wieners said.

Although one box bought recently on the island clearly states the items are not intended for unlawful use, Wieners and Galveston defense attorney Kevin Rekoff can’t imagine a legal use for the kits.

“I had a client that was on his way to a parole office and was caught with a bladder on him,” Rekoff said. “He had women’s pee, and it tested for some type of pregnancy medication.”

Unless someone can come up with a legal reason for keeping synthetic urine in a bottle with a built-in thermometer and a hand warmer, it’s almost presumed intent to violate the law, Rekoff said.

One manager of an island drug testing clinic said clients must empty their pockets before heading to the restroom with a plastic cup, and employees test the temperature of submitted specimens.

READ THE FULL STORY HERE

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

First reported US swine-flu death occurs in Houston




The first reported death in the United States from the swine flu outbreak was that of a 23-month-old Mexican toddler who fell ill in Brownsville and was transported for treatment in Houston, where the child died Monday, city officials said.
Kathy Barton, spokeswoman for the Houston Department of Health and Human Services, did not say which hospital treated the child or give any other details about the toddler.

There still have been no reported Houston-area cases of the disease, which is thought to have begun in Mexico but is being detected around the world. However, Barton said Houston should expect to see cases originate here.
She added that hospitals that handle any flu cases, swine or otherwise, take precautions to prevent its spread, such as masks, frequent handwashing and other sanitation measures.

"Even though we've been expecting this, it is very, very sad," said Dr. Richard Besser, acting chief of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, who made the initial announcement of a Texas death on several nationally televised morning shows today. "As a pediatrician and a parent, my heart goes out to the family."

Germany today reported its first three cases of swine flu. The number of confirmed swine flu cases in the United States before today rose to 66 in six states, with 45 in New York, 11 in California, six in Texas, two in Kansas and one each in Indiana and Ohio, but cities and states suspected more. In New York, the city's health commissioner said "many hundreds" of schoolchildren were ill at a school where some students had confirmed cases.

The world has no vaccine to prevent infection but U.S. health officials aim to have a key ingredient for one ready in early May, the big step that vaccine manufacturers are awaiting. But even if the World Health Organization ordered up emergency vaccine supplies — and that decision hasn't been made yet — it would take at least two more months to produce the initial shots needed for human safety testing.
"We're working together at 100 miles an hour to get material that will be useful," Dr. Jesse Goodman, who oversees the Food and Drug Administration's swine flu work, told The Associated Press.
The U.S. is shipping to states not only enough anti-flu medication for 11 million people, but also masks, hospital supplies and flu test kits. President Barack Obama asked Congress for $1.5 billion in emergency funds to help build more drug stockpiles and monitor future cases, as well as help international efforts to avoid a full-fledged pandemic.

"It's a very serious possibility, but it is still too early to say that this is inevitable," the WHO's flu chief, Dr. Keiji Fukuda, told a telephone news conference.
Cuba and Argentina banned flights to Mexico, where swine flu is suspected of killing more than 150 people and sickening well over 2,000. In a bit of good news, Mexico's health secretary, Jose Cordova, late Tuesday called the death toll there "more or less stable."

Mexico City, one of the world's largest cities, has taken drastic steps to curb the virus' spread, starting with shutting down schools and on Tuesday expanding closures to gyms and swimming pools and even telling restaurants to limit service to takeout. People who venture out tend to wear masks in hopes of protection.
New Zealand, Australia, Israel, Britain, Canada and now Germany have also reported cases. But the only deaths so far have been Mexican citizens, baffling experts.
The WHO argues against closing borders to stem the spread, and the U.S. — although checking arriving travelers for the ill who may need care — agrees it's too late for that tactic.

"Sealing a border as an approach to containment is something that has been discussed and it was our planning assumption should an outbreak of a new strain of influenza occur overseas. We had plans for trying to swoop in and knockout or quench an outbreak if it were occurring far from our borders. That's not the case here," Besser told a telephone briefing of Nevada-based health providers and reporters. "The idea of trying to limit the spread to Mexico is not realistic or at all possible."
"Border controls do not work. Travel restrictions do not work," WHO spokesman Gregory Hartl said in Geneva, recalling the SARS epidemic earlier in the decade that killed 774 people, mostly in Asia, and slowed the global economy.

Authorities sought to keep the crisis in context: Flu deaths are common around the world. In the U.S. alone, the CDC says about 36,000 people a year die of flu-related causes. Still, the CDC calls the new strain a combination of pig, bird and human.

READ THE FULL STORY HERE.

Monday, April 20, 2009

Friendswood dentist practices despite criminal drug charge



By Jeremy Rogalski / 11 News Defenders
HOUSTON -- Walk into the Austin offices of the Texas State Board of Dental Examiners, and the motto on the wall sounds reassuring: “Safeguarding the Dental Health of Texans.”

But in Texas, a dentist can write himself prescriptions for narcotics, plead guilty to felony drug charges and not be disciplined by those entrusted with protecting the public.

Such is the case for Dr. Russell R. Boone, who practices in Friendswood, and who used his officer manager’s identity and insurance to commit fraud.

“It made me look like I was a drug addict,” said Becky Murphy, who worked for Dr. Boone for seven years.

Murphy said without her knowledge, prescriptions for the highly addictive painkiller hydrocodone were showing up on her husband’s company’s insurance. Insurance records show from July 2007 and May 2008, more than 1,000 pills were prescribed on her account.

“Well I knew right off the bat it was fraud,” Murphy said.




But what she didn’t know at the time was who was behind that alleged fraud.

“I don’t even know how to put it into words because it was, it was so, it was such a shock,” Murphy said. “Dr. Boone had broken every rule in the book.”

READ THE FULL STORY HERE

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Friendswood man on trial for endangering Shuttle.



A Friendswood man pleaded guilty Monday to selling NASA a space shuttle part that prosecutors allege could have endangered astronauts’ lives.

Richard J. Harmon, 60, the former owner of Cornerstone Machining Inc. in Alvin, pleaded guilty to a federal felony charge of fraud involving a space vehicle part. U.S. District Judge Lynn Hughes scheduled Harmon’s sentencing for June when he could face up to 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

Assistant U.S. Attorney John Lewis presented the judge with a written summary of Harmon’s crime. It stated that Harmon, who had worked in the aerospace industry for decades, subcontracted to build two fasteners for $18,795 each and agreed to meet all precise specifications or let authorities know about any changes.
The fasteners would hold cargo to the space shuttle and prosecutors allege if a defect had caused the cargo to come lose in ascent into orbit, “it would almost certainly have resulted in the destruction of the shuttle.”
Harmon’s shop was making one of the fasteners when a cutting machine made a gash in the aluminum, and Harmon agreed to have it welded over.

He did not tell the contractor that hired him, Spacehab Inc., about that mistake, Lewis’ written fact scenario stated. Harmon also failed to inform the lead contractor, Lockheed, and NASA.
The weld caused the fastener to lose 40 percent of its strength, the government claimed. “Ultimately Lockheed scrapped the (part) because the gash and weld created too great a risk that it would fail in flight and destroy the space shuttle,” Lewis’ fact scenario concluded.

READ THE REST OF THE STORY HERE.

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