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Be who you are and say what you feel because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind. - Dr. Seuss
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Can You Move It And Work It On A Treadmill Desk? : NPR

Researchers and companies are bringing movement back into the office with treadmill desks, walking meetings and games. Employees say it has helped them lose weight and be more productive.

 

'James Levine, an obesity expert at the Mayo Clinic came up with the idea of the treadmill desk. He says that since the 1960s, work spaces have been designed to minimize movement. It's a culturally ingrained mindset, he says, which dominates much of our lives today.

 

Levine is on a mission to get any kind of movement into the workplace and the workday and has consulted with a number of companies nationwide to help them do this. The most popular activity by far, he says, is the "walk and talk" meeting. "They're generally shorter, more productive, and people don't fall asleep during walk-and-talk meetings."'

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Doctor from 'Dickensian' hostel suspended - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

Doctor from 'Dickensian' hostel suspended - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation) | this curious life | Scoop.it
A doctor who treated boarding house residents where six mentally ill residents died is suspended, leaving authorities scrambling for replacement services.

 

Appalling medical 'care' and double standards for rights of tenants with mental illnesses may now be addressed after too many deaths................

 

'Licensed boarding houses are private businesses that run for a profit and accommodate people with disabilities who choose their own medical practitioners, except those under guardianship.

 

A Background Briefing program on RN in June heard that there had been 20 complaints to the department about the boarding house but it was local police officers - not the department - who went to the coroner.

 

Five of the six residents who died at 300 Hostel were Dr Reitberger's patients.

 

'[The Coroner] Ms Jerram recommended the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists review the deaths and the use of multiple anti-psychotics to establish protocols for prescription and monitoring the general health of patients.

 

But when contacted for comment, the college did not know of the inquest or its recommendation.'

 

 

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