Stop The Hate 11-28

Stop The Hate 11-28

The  purpose of Stop The Hate 11-28  is to  create awareness for the persecution happening in Orissa, India by displaying the love of Christ in action. We plan to accomplish this by:

  • Developing a national campaign against the persecution of Christians in Orissa.
  • Creating a peaceful rally by marching downtown
  • Assembling our community on one day, Black Friday November 28th
  • By standing in lines during peak shopping hours during heavy media coverage
  • Marching downtown with signs (displaying Bible verses about love/ cause)
  • Handing out pamphlets/coffee and food to people standing in lines.
  • Raising funds for local ministries to help support suffering people.
  • Uploading videos through Youtube, Facebook, etc
  • Changing our Facebook status, messaging our friends, wearing a T-shirt
  • Wearing all black and red to signify the suffering of the people

Kurtis Taylor

Kurtis Taylor

Kurtis is the Founder and CEO of PC BISTRO and LAN Admin for TCF Bank

Pc Bistro

PC Bistro.com is a pc or computer support content delivery website.   We wanted to find a way to help the residential and small business online community with their pc related problems.  We also wanted to help the online community to find a sure way of resolving their pc related problems by viewing a how to article or scheduling free pc support with a live certified computer technician.

Everything we do on it site is 100% free.  We believe that is what 90% of the internet content should provide free information, free commerce, and free computer support and only 10% should be products or services.

We found it hard to find the information that we were looking for without being coach into purchasing a product or service.  This is why we are looking to change that with PC Bistro.com because it is way internet content and service should be for free.

Tamia Walker

I am a everyday person learning new things about myself, my culture and life.: Tamia Walker

How to Clear the print queue with out restarting the computer

How to Clear the print queue with out restarting the computer.

Ever had a print job thats stuck in the queue and will not clear? Here is how to restart the PRINT SPOOLER in Windows XP, which will clear any jobs in the queue with out having to restart the computer.

1.Click Start
2.Click “Run”
3.Type in “services.msc” in the Run Box
4.Scroll down to “Print Spooler”
5.Select Print Spooler
6.Click “Stop the service”
7.Click “Start the Service”

That should do it.

Jameson Varghese

The ICON Aka Jameson Varghese

Cindi LaPorte

Cindi LaPorte is currently the Manager Peds, Peds CCU, Echo Room, and Child Life for Ronald McDonald Children’s Hospital of Loyola University Medical Center, Chicago.

Cindi also works closely with the Ronald McDonald House

Mike DiMiele

Mike Dimiele bachelors in Marketing . Job: marketing analyst  , internet marketing.

aka Mike D

Phinny George

Phinny George fashion stylist , carmax manager, bachelors degree in management information system, and fashion design. 

any fast cars and music

Support Ronald McDonald’s Children Hospital

Please support Ronald McDonald’s Children Hospital of Loyola University Medical Center

Please support Ronald McDonald’s Children Hospital of Loyola University Medical Centerby voting at www.colgate.com/starlight each day through March 31.

The ten hospitals with the most votes will be awarded a brand new Fun Center, which is equipped with the new Nintendo Wii, DVD player and Sharp AQUOS LCD TV along with interactive games. The children at our hospital would certainly enjoy the prize. Please take a moment to vote for RMCH of LUMC, and pass this along to everyone you know

http://www.colgate.com/app/Colgate/US/Corp/CommunityPrograms/Starlight-Starbright-Childrens-Foundation/vote/Chicago.cvsp

The Ronald McDonald® Children’s Hospital of Loyola provides special services in the health care of children, ranging from inpatient to outpatient care in general pediatrics to pediatric subspecialties. Nearly 100 full-time pediatricians and pediatric subspecialists are part of the hospital and teach at Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine

LOYOLA USES VIRTUAL-REALITY VIDEO GAME TO RELIEVE PAIN

 

LOYOLA USES VIRTUAL-REALITY VIDEO GAME TO HELP BURN PATIENTS PLAY THEIR WAY TO PAIN RELIEF

Hospital is the first in Illinois to use 21st century technology for wound care, physical therapy

MAYWOOD, Ill. – To a patient recovering from severe burns, no place would be more soothing than a polar landscape of gently falling snowflakes, snowmen, penguins, igloos and icy rivers.

That’s the thinking behind SnowWorld, an interactive, virtual-reality video game being used at Loyola University Hospital in Maywood, Ill., to manage pain felt by burn patients during wound care and physical therapy. Loyola is the first hospital in Illinois and only one of a handful across the nation that is employing this 21st century technology to help burn patients recover from their injuries.

“Severe burns are one of the most painful injuries a person can endure,” said Dr. Richard Gamelli, chairman of the department of surgery, Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine, Maywood. “Anything that we can do to lessen the pain and suffering of patients during treatment is a plus. This system is the next step in helping us to do that.”

Treatment of burn injuries can be excruciating. It often involves daily bandage changes, the cleaning of wounds and the removal of dead tissue in order to stave off infection and prevent scar tissue from forming. Also, a burn patient’s skin must be stretched in order to restore and maintain the range of motion, minimize muscle atrophy and reduce the need for further grafts.

The virtual-reality system eases pain of treatment by immersing burn patients in a wintry, computer-generated environment. Its interactive, multi-sensory, features put patients in a deep freeze of distraction, leaving less attention for the processing of incoming pain signals. It’s similar to what has been done with music, movies and even two-dimensional video games, but more effective because it involves problem-solving activities that emphasize coolness.

“The theory is solid. Think of a toothache,” said Gamelli, who is also chief of Loyola’s Burn Center. “During the day it’s less painful because you have more demands on your attention. However, when night comes and things quiet down, your pain can flair up because you have far less to focus on.”

Research related to these types of systems supports SnowWorld. Studies in Australia, Israel and Washington state have shown that “burn patients undergoing wound care report that their pain drops dramatically when they engage in virtual-reality programs. A recent MRI study at the University of Washington in Seattle, found that “virtual reality actually reduces the amount of pain-related activity in the brain.”

During treatment, a patient wears a stereoscopic, position-tracking helmet that displays a world of three-dimensional graphics. The patient is also equipped with headphones and a mouse that allows the patient to throw snowballs. Along with sound effects, the system has the ability to let the patient pipe in their favorite music while the play the game.

Once the system is turned on, the patient enters a world of snowmen, penguins and polar bears that are perched on icy ledges or are floating in a frigid river. The snowmen use their spindly arms and hands to throw snowballs at the patient who can, with the click of the mouse, deflect the incoming ball of ice with a snowball of their own. Further clicks can unleash a torrent of virtual snowballs that on contact cause the snowmen and igloos to explode in powdery puffs and the penguins to cartwheel over with a squawk. The system also has two high-resolution flat-screen monitors that display what the patient is seeing.

Para Family Charitable Foundation donated $25,000 to help Loyola purchase the virtual-reality system, which costs about $50,000.

The SnowWorld software was designed by Hunter G. Hoffman, Ph.D., and David Patterson, Ph.D., research scientists in Seattle, who were both motivated by their concern for the pain, fear and anxiety that children and teenagers experience when undergoing therapy for burn injuries.

“Young people frequently anticipate the pain of therapy and cry and yell even before they’re touched,” said Melissa Drews, occupational therapist, department of orthopaedic surgery and rehabilitation, Loyola. “Since this system blocks all outside sights and sounds, it takes them completely out of what is to them an anxiety-inducing setting and transports to a fun place with fun things to do.”

The virtual-reality system has further application beyond burn care. It’s been used to help people overcome phobias and post traumatic stress syndrome. It’s also been used in urological procedures, dentistry and to control pain during physical therapy for cerebral palsy patients.

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