Thursday, October 11, 2012

Our Community Coming Together to Create a Masterpiece.

Check the following website for information on all the artist at this historic event at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Great_Day_in_Harlem

As an emergency manager always changing perspective, thinking inside, outside, and out of the box entirely this photo was remade as a Gordon Parks photo in the 70's of the remaining surviving musicians.

I'd like to know of the remaining children alive in the photo that added character to original.  One even reminds me of Wesley Snipes.

This really would have been living history.

Charles D. Sharp
Chief Executive
Black Emergency Managers Association





Map Guide to Musicians

1Hilton Jefferson 2Benny Golson 3Art Farmer 4Wilbur Ware 5Art Blakey 6Chubby Jackson  7Johnny Griffin 8Dickie Wells9Buck Clayton 10Taft Jordan 11Zutty Singleton 12Red Allen  13Tyree Glenn 14Miff Molo 15Sonny Greer 16Jay C. Higginbotham 17Jimmy Jones 18Charles Mingus  19Jo Jones 20Gene Krupa 21Max Kaminsky 22George Wettling 23 Bud Freeman 24Pee Wee Russell  25Ernie Wilkins 26Buster Bailey  27Osie Johnson 28Gigi Gryce 29Hank Jones 30Eddie Locke  31Horace Silver 32Luckey Roberts 33Maxine Sullivan 34Jimmy Rushing 35Joe Thomas 36Scoville Browne  37Stuff Smith 38Bill Crump 39Coleman Hawkins 40Rudy Powell 41Oscar Pettiford 42Sahib Shihab  43Marian McPartland 44Sonny Rollins 45Lawrence Brown 46Mary Lou Williams 47Emmett Berry  48Thelonius Monk  49Vic Dickenson   50Milt Hinton  51Lester Young   52Rex Stewart  53J.C. Heard  54Gerry Mulligan  55Roy Eldgridge 56Dizzy Gillespie 57Count Basie



Registration Closes October 19th: 2012 Science of Eliminating Health Disparities Summit


REGISTER TODAY: If you have completed the general registration, and have not selected your sessions, time is running out and sessions are filling up.

Choose from more than 100 sessions including workshops, pre-summit sessions, plenary sessions, and concurrent sessions, organized under three tracks and 16 themes across multiple disciplines.  National and international leaders in health disparities, as well as experts in science, medicine, policy, public health, dentistry, academia and the community, will share innovative interventions and highlight progress, challenges and opportunities in implementing various strategies towards eliminating health disparities. Visit approximately 1,000 posters, and be a part of the Town Hall Forum to share your perspective on future directions to accelerate the pace to eliminate health disparities.

REGISTRATION DEADLINE:
Registration closes on October 19th at 5:00 p.m. EST. There is no registration fee.  Space is limited therefore registration is required for the overall conference, as well as workshops, pre-summit sessions and concurrent sessions. To learn more about the 2012 Science of Eliminating Health Disparities Summit, and to register, visit http://www.nimhd.nih.gov/summit_site/registration.html or e-mail 2012summit@mail.nih.gov

Sessions Include:

Public Housing and Public Health Practice:  Addressing Oral Health Disparities Where People Live

The U.S.-Brazil Joint Action Plan to Eliminate Racial and Ethnic Discrimination and Promote Equality (JAPER): A Cooperative Approach to Addressing Social Exclusion and Health Disparities

Testing and Linkage to Treatment/Care for Vulnerable Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander Communities

The Federal Environmental Justice Interagency Working Group: Improving Health and Environment in Communities across America.

Food Security, Health and Sustainable Development: Promotores, Food Security, and the Latino Community: A Partnership between the HHS Office of Minority Health and the U.S. Department of Agriculture

Research and Community Efforts to Address Inner-City Asthma

Data Collection Standards for Race, Ethnicity, Sex, Primary Language and Disability Status.

The Economic and Public Health Burden of Global Tobacco Use:  Current issues and Lessons learned in Curbing the Epidemic

Addressing American Indian Oral Health Challenges: Current Research and Promising Approaches

Mobilizing Partnerships and Resources to Address Homelessness

Housing as a Contributor to Health Disparities: A Review of Progress and Remaining Challenges

Webinar: October 17, 2012. MLK Jr. Day of Service January 21, 2013

MLK

October 17th Webinar

Strategies for Success: Connecting Your Project to Economic Opportunity

Have you already begun planning your projects or events for the 2013 Martin Luther King, Jr. Day of Service? The Corporation for National and Community Service (CNCS) has tools and resources to help you!

CNCS is providing a webinar series to assist with developing projects, raising resources, reaching out and communicating your message, recruiting volunteers, and preparing for the day of service.

The first one is:


This webinar will include an overview of available resources for project planning and development and will include ideas that support economic opportunity including:
• Helping Veterans Translate Military Skills to the Business World
• Assisting First-time College Students with Completing the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA)
• Addressing Hunger and Nutrition: Nutrition Programs,  Summer Feeding, and Other Food Security projects
• Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) Program
• Educating Communities About Healthy Futures

Deepwater Horizon: Monitoring and Environmental Impact


Press Release
Response Logo
Deepwater Horizon Incident
Joint Information Center
(713) 323-1670

You are subscribed to News Releases for RestoreTheGulf.gov. This information has recently been updated, and is now available.
10/10/2012 09:55 PM EDT

NEW ORLEANS — The Federal On-Scene Coordinator for the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in New Orleans issued a Notice of Federal Interest to BP and Transocean Tuesday.

Coast Guard Capt. Duke Walker issued the NOFI following sample results from an oil sheen located in the vicinity of where the Deepwater Horizon drill rig exploded and sank more than two years ago.

The sheen was first reported to the National Response Center Sept. 16 by BP based on satellite images from the 9th and 14th overpasses in the Mississippi Canyon, block 252, approximately 50 miles off the coast of Louisiana. The sheen is not feasible to recover and does not pose a risk to the shoreline.

The Coast Guard, in concert with BP and NOAA, has conducted regular assessments of the sheen by aircraft and boat since its discovery. The observed sheen size has varied over time depending upon the conditions present. Samples of the sheen were taken by Coast Guard Marine Safety Unit Morgan City Sept. 26 and sent to the Coast Guard Marine Safety Lab in New London, Conn. The Marine Safety Laboratory results indicate the sheen correlates to oil that originated from BP’s Macondo Well. The exact source of the sheen is uncertain at this time but could be residual oil associated with wreckage and/or debris left on the seabed from the Deepwater Horizon incident in 2010.

The NOFI effectively informs BP and Transocean that the Coast Guard matched the sheen samples to the Deepwater Horizon spill or sunken drilling debris and that either party or both may be held accountable for any cost associated with further assessments or operations related to this sheen.

The Gulf Coast Incident Management Team remains committed to the continued cleanup of the Gulf Coast and all shorelines affected as a result of the Deepwater Horizon oil rig explosion. The FOSC is determined to continue response activities to remove all oil where it is technologically feasible, environmentally beneficial and safe for workers to perform recovery operations.

The public is reminded to contact the National Response Center at 1-800-424-8802 to report all pollution incidents or the Coast Guard 8th District command center at 504-589-6225 in the event of any marine emergencies.

VOTE. Thought provoking words of Frederick Douglas


Make sure you vote!

Since BEMA's HQ Office is less than 10-blocks from the home of Frederick Douglas designated as a museum in Southeast Washington, D.C., these words have added meaning.

Charles Sharp.  Chief Executive.  Black Emergency Managers Association (BEMA)

“Though the colored man is no longer subject to barter and sale, he is surrounded by an adverse settlement which fetters all his movements. In his downward course he meets with no resistance, but his course upward is resented and resisted at every step of his progress. If he comes in ignorance, rags and wretchedness he conforms to the popular belief of his character, and in that character he is welcome; but if he shall come as a gentleman, a scholar and a statesman, he is hailed as a contradiction to the national faith concerning his race, and his coming is resented as impudence. In one case he may provoke contempt and derision, but in the other he is an affront to pride and provokes malice.”

Frederick Douglass

These words 129 years later  Think about it!


Make sure YOU vote.

Monday, October 8, 2012

How the Best Boards and Best Directors Operate


How the Best Boards and Best Directors Operate

 
Sitting on the board of a Fortune 500 company, or any large organization, is a great responsibility. Personally, I've learned a tremendous amount in the nearly one year since I was appointed to the Starbucks board of directors.
Having learned so much, I was delighted to be able discuss best practices for boards and directors at the Fortune Most Powerful Women Summit in Laguna Niguel, CA earlier this week.
With insights from Carol Bartz (former CEO of Yahoo! and before that CEO of Autodesk, now director on several boards including Cisco) and Anne Mulcahy (former CEO of Xerox, now Chairman of the Board of Save the Children and board director at Johnson & Johnson, Target, Washington Post, etc.), and moderated by the talented Carol Loomis, we had a great discussion about how the best public boards and companies operate.
In a nutshell:
  1. Directors have the courage and culture to constructively disagree with one another and with management without anyone taking it personally.
  2. There is ample diversity of backgrounds and opinions on board to carefully consider all options and angles in the case of important decisions. The board is large and diverse enough to encompass the full breadth of the corporation’s businesses, market segments, and geographies, but not so large that it becomes unwieldy or clumsy.
  3. Greater care and consideration should be given during both the director selection and onboarding process. Board members need to remain committed to continual learning, preparation, and relationship-building with other board members and management.
All in all, the Fortune Summit was fantastically run, thanks in large part to conference organizers Pattie Sellers and Stephanie Mehta. To read more about my experience at the Fortune Most Powerful Women Summit, head over to the Hearsay Social Blog.

Sunday, October 7, 2012

Friday, October 5, 2012

2012 Science of Eliminating Health Disparities Summit.



Register today for the 2012 Science of Eliminating Health Disparities Summit. 
Remember, registration is a two-step process.  You must first complete the 
general registration to obtain a password to select your breakout sessions.

If you have not yet made your selections, you can choose from more than 100 sessions 
in three different tracks under 16 different themes including: 

·         Social, Biological, Environmental and Economic Disparities in Childhood 
Developmental Health Outcomes

·         Testing and Linkage to Treatment/Care for Vulnerable Asian American, 
Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander Communities

·         Elder Abuse in Diverse Communities: Scope, Culture, and Policy Implications

·         Public Policies, System-level and Environmental Strategies to Address Obesity 
 Prevention and Health

·         Research and Community Efforts to Address Inner-City Asthma

·         Patient-Centered Outcomes and Effectiveness Research in Health Disparities

·         Place Matters for Health:  Using Locally-Tailored Community Health Equity 
Reports to Compel Action to Eliminate Health Inequities

·         Racial and Ethnic Differences and Disparities in Pain:  The State of the 
Science of Inclusion 

·         The Hidden Toll of Occupational Health Disparities

·         10 Years Later: Lessons Learned in a Community-based Rheumatology 
Clinic with an Underserved Patient Population

·         Developing and Implementing the 2012 HHS Environmental Justice Strategy: 
The Importance of Stakeholder Engagement

If you have questions, please contact 2012summit@mail.nih.gov or call 240-395-0549.

Health Disparities Partnership Forum. October 22-23, 2012

Minority Health Action Alert

Provided by the Office of Minority Health Resource Center
October 04, 2012

NPA - National Partnership for Action

American Diabetes Association's Fifth Disparities Partnership Forum, 

October 22-23, Washington, D.C.

Registration is now open Exit Disclaimer  for the American Diabetes Association's Fifth Disparities Partnership 
Forum on diabetes care in high risk populations. The goal of the forum is to encourage collaboration 
with partners to address the disparity of cultural competency, health literacy and health equity in 
diabetes care, specifically in populations at highest risk for type 2 diabetes, such as African 
Americans, Hispanic/Latinos, American Indian/Alaskan Natives, 
Asian American/Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islanders, older adults, women, low-income and 
uninsured persons. Scheduled speakers include:
 
  • Dr. J. Nadine Gracia, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Minority Health (Acting) and the Acting Director of the Office of Minority Health at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)
  • Dr. Augustus A. White III, Author and Professor of Medical Education and Orthopedic Surgery at 
  • Harvard Medical School
  • Dr. Kenneth Moritsugu, chair of the Johnson & Johnson Diabetes Institute
  • Dr. Pedro Jose Greer, Professor of Medicine and Chairman of the Department of Humanities 
  • Health and Society at Florida International University 

  • For more information on the forum, please contact Monique Lindsy at mlindsy@diabetes.org.
  • Thursday, October 4, 2012

    Health Alert: Meningitis and Stroke from Steroid Injections



    HAN
    This is an official
    CDC HEALTH ADVISORY
    Distributed via the CDC Health Alert Network
    October 4, 2012, 17:05 ET (5:05 PM ET)
    CDCHAN-00327
    Meningitis and Stroke Associated with Potentially Contaminated Product
    Summary
    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) are coordinating a multi-state investigation of fungal meningitis among patients who received an epidural steroid injection. Several of these patients also suffered strokes that are believed to have resulted from their infection.  As of October 4, 2012, five deaths have been reported. Fungal meningitis is not transmitted from person to person.  These cases are associated with a potentially contaminated medication.  Investigation into the exact source is ongoing; however, interim data show that all infected patients received injection with preservative-free methylprednisolone acetate (80mg/ml) prepared by New England Compounding Center, located in Framingham, MA.
    BackgroundOn September 21, 2012, CDC was notified by the Tennessee Department of Health of a patient with the onset of meningitis approximately 19 days following epidural steroid injection at a Tennessee ambulatory surgery center (ASC).  Initial cultures of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and blood were negative; subsequently, Aspergillus fumigatus was isolated from CSF by fungal culture. On September 28, investigators identified a case outside of Tennessee, possibly indicating contamination of a widely distributed medication. As of October 4, a total of 35 cases* in the following six states have been identified with a clinical picture consistent with fungal infection: Florida (2 cases), Indiana (1 case), Tennessee (25 cases, including 3 deaths), Maryland (2 cases, including 1 death), North Carolina (1 case), and Virginia (4 cases, including 1 death).  Fungus has been identified in specimens obtained from five patients, one of whom also had Propionobacterium acnes, of unclear clinical significance, isolated from a post-mortem central nervous system specimen.
    Infected patients have presented approximately 1 to 4 weeks following their injection with a variety of symptoms, including fever, new or worsening headache, nausea, and new neurological deficit (consistent with deep brain stroke). Some of these patients’ symptoms were very mild in nature.  CSF obtained from these patients has typically shown elevated white cell count (with a predominance of neutrophils), low glucose, and elevated protein.
    RecommendationsOn September 25, 2012, the New England Compounding Center located in Framingham, MA voluntarily recalled the following lots of methylprednisolone acetate (PF) 80mg/ml:
    • Methylprednisolone Acetate (PF) 80 mg/ml Injection, Lot #05212012@68, BUD 11/17/2012
    • Methylprednisolone Acetate (PF) 80 mg/ml Injection, Lot #06292012@26, BUD 12/26/2012
    • Methylprednisolone Acetate (PF) 80 mg/ml Injection, Lot #08102012@51, BUD 2/6/2013
    On October 3, 2012, the compounding center ceased all production and initiated recall of all methylprednisolone acetate and other drug products prepared for intrathecal administration.
    Physicians should contact patients who have had an injection (e.g., spinal, joint) using any of the three lots of methylprednisolone acetate listed above to determine if they are having any symptoms.  Although all cases detected to date occurred after injections with products from these three lots, out of an abundance of caution, CDC and FDA recommend that healthcare professionals cease use of anyproduct produced by the New England Compounding Center until further information is available.
    For patients who received epidural injection and have symptoms of meningitis or basilar stroke, a diagnostic lumbar puncture (LP) should be performed, if not contraindicated. Because presenting symptoms of some patients with meningitis have been mild and not classic for meningitis (e.g., new or worsening headache without fever or neck stiffness), physicians should have a low threshold for LP.  While CDC is aware of infections occurring only in patients who have received epidural steroid injections, patients who received other types of injection with methylprednisolone acetate from those three lots should also be contacted to assess for signs of infection (e.g., swelling, increasing pain, redness, warmth at the injection site) and should be encouraged to seek evaluation (e.g., arthrocentesis) if such symptoms exist.
    For guidance on diagnostic testing that should be performed on patient specimens, physicians can go tohttp://www.cdc.gov/hai/outbreaks/meningitis.html.   State health departments should be informed of patients undergoing evaluation.  Clinicians should report any suspected adverse events following use of these products to FDA's MedWatch program at 1-800-332-1088 or www.fda.gov/medwatch.
    *Case Definition
    1: A person with meningitis1 of sub-acute onset (1-4 weeks) following epidural injection after July 1, 2012. 
    2: A person, who has not received a lumbar puncture, with basilar stroke 1-4 weeks following epidural injection after July 1, 20122.
    3. A person with evidence of spinal osteomyelitis or epidural abscess at the site of an epidural injection diagnosed 1-4 weeks after epidural injection after July 1, 2012.
    1clinically diagnosed meningitis meaning 1 or more of the following symptoms: headache, fever, stiff neck, or photophobia and a CSF profile consistent with meningitis (elevated protein/low glucose/pleocytosis)
    2These people, if possible, should have an LP.
    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) protects people's health and safety by preventing and controlling diseases and injuries; enhances health decisions by providing credible information on critical health issues; and promotes healthy living through strong partnerships with local, national, and international organizations.


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