cirdan
Engineer
- Joined
- Mar 30, 2011
- Messages
- 3,853
Three per train? Are you expecting three simultaneous cardiac arrests?
If there is a derailment or some other incident, some parts of the train may be unreachable.
Three per train? Are you expecting three simultaneous cardiac arrests?
The fitness/exercise "craze" started in the 1970s and also the move to start looking at improving your own diet. I got on the healthy foods bandwagon in 1978 or 9 and was able to stay on that wagon. But my efforts to get on the exercise bandwagon didn't go as well until the 2000s. I kept trying to climb on, but then I would fall off.Wow, that's quite an amazing statistic.
Any idea what the reason is?
It can't be food as that has got less healthy if anything.
Yeah they need to install seatbelts on the exercise bandwagon. Seems like so many have a tendency to fall off! I was required to be certified in first aid along with CPR as a manager for UPS in the early 90's. But that certification has long since run out.The fitness/exercise "craze" started in the 1970s and also the move to start looking at improving your own diet. I got on the healthy foods bandwagon in 1978 or 9 and was able to stay on that wagon. But my efforts to get on the exercise bandwagon didn't go as well until the 2000s. I kept trying to climb on, but then I would fall off.
Plus starting in the 1980s, I would say, there was a push for people, especially employees of certain companies, to learn CPR. I suppose that helped too. I learned it, but I didn't stick with it because I would tire easily and am pretty weak, so I didn't keep up any certification.
The fitness/exercise "craze" started in the 1970s and also the move to start looking at improving your own diet. I got on the healthy foods bandwagon in 1978 or 9 and was able to stay on that wagon. But my efforts to get on the exercise bandwagon didn't go as well until the 2000s. I kept trying to climb on, but then I would fall off.
Plus starting in the 1980s, I would say, there was a push for people, especially employees of certain companies, to learn CPR. I suppose that helped too. I learned it, but I didn't stick with it because I would tire easily and am pretty weak, so I didn't keep up any certification.
Yeah, maybe, but I have been told that housework doesn't count as exercise even if you get physically tired doing it. Doesn't make sense to me, but...I'm surprised it had such a huge impact, as it was probably offset (if not caused) by the general trend towards fewer manual jobs and more people in offices which led to many not getting the minimal activity required to maintain a healthy lifestyle.
Americans are as unhealthy today as we have ever been but medical technology is getting better at keeping unhealthy people alive.We (at least some-not me though?) are overall healthier than we were in the 1950's - 2000's for heart issues.
Not to mention that most nurses looking for a job right now are those who refuse to vaccinate.There is a huge shortage of nurses in hospitals and clinics as it is, meaning many patients are not getting the care they deserve. Diverting nurses to work in other, less essential, places would only make it worse.
When it comes to causes of heart disease, one major exception is smoking. Smoking rates have fallen dramatically over the past few decades.Americans are as unhealthy today as we have ever been but medical technology is getting better at keeping unhealthy people alive.
Where I live smoking has been replaced by smokeless tobacco and vaping which remain highly addictive and also employ untested off-label chemicals. It's clear that we've only tackled the symptom by telling people that smoking is bad rather than teaching people how to identify and avoid unhealthy behavior.
Oh how I wish I was in those reduced numbers!When it comes to causes of heart disease, one major exception is smoking. Smoking rates have fallen dramatically over the past few decades.
Indeed! I wish I had some quality N95 masks back then. At least here it was mostly cigarettes. In India on intercity buses and non-AC trains (specially in lower class carriages) it was armies of people smoking Bidis which is basically tobacco wrapped in a tobacco leaf. It is a wonder I and many others survive that without getting asphyxiated.I agree. But even so there is massively less smoking overall. I remember the day that you could walk into any pub or bar and the air would be so thick that you would struggle to see across to the other side of the room. Or that it was normal for people to smoke in offices at work, on airliners etc etc.
CDC says bidis are not wrapped in a tobacco leaf, but rather "a tendu or temburni leaf (plants native to Asia)."Indeed! I wish I had some quality N95 masks back then. At least here it was mostly cigarettes. In India on intercity buses and non-AC trains (specially in lower class carriages) it was armies of people smoking Bidis which is basically tobacco wrapped in a tobacco leaf. It is a wonder I and many others survive that without getting asphyxiated.
Well if CDC says so then it must be so. I don't claim any knowledge that is irrefutable about Bidis, or any other Tobacco products. Never used one. Only suffered through having them in the environment. Still do when back in IndiaCDC says bidis are not wrapped in a tobacco leaf, but rather "a tendu or temburni leaf (plants native to Asia)."
"Smoke from a bidi contains three to five times the amount of nicotine as a regular cigarette and places users at risk for nicotine addiction. "
Good point. The dismal era of the passive aggressive cigarette smoker exposed nearly everyone to secondhand poisoning. At least that factor has abated despite the proliferation of dipping and vaping. It just amazes me how some parents defended teen vaping as if they had never learned anything.I agree. But even so there is massively less smoking overall. I remember the day that you could walk into any pub or bar and the air would be so thick that you would struggle to see across to the other side of the room. Or that it was normal for people to smoke in offices at work, on airliners etc etc.
The situation in the Lounges on LD trains was as bad until finally smoking was disallowed. I remember a screen of blueish smoke that hit you in the face as you entered the much vaunted Le Pub on the Montrealer back in the days.I agree. But even so there is massively less smoking overall. I remember the day that you could walk into any pub or bar and the air would be so thick that you would struggle to see across to the other side of the room. Or that it was normal for people to smoke in offices at work, on airliners etc etc.
Now, I don't know. I remember going into the lounge car on the Crescent in 1990 when they still allowed smoking and was pretty impressed at whatever hardcore ventillation system was in place. Didn't smell any tobacco smoke at all.The situation in the Lounges on LD trains was as bad until finally smoking was disallowed. I remember a screen of blueish smoke that hit you in the face as you entered the much vaunted Le Pub on the Montrealer back in the days.
I remember as a kid going to night baseball games at Fenway Park where you could see a literal cloud of smoke arising from across the ballpark. And, at my first full-time job, I shared an office with a chain-smoker. When I was pregnant, I recall feeling that it was an imposition to ask if he could please not smoke in the office. How times have changed! (And, for once, for the better!)I remember the day that you could walk into any pub or bar and the air would be so thick that you would struggle to see across to the other side of the room. Or that it was normal for people to smoke in offices at work, on airliners etc etc.
I was a real bad boy about that in the days of my irresponsible youth, though I smoked a pipe and not cigarettes. Heck, I once lit up my pipe in the air on a TWA flight between PHL and ORD sometime in 1973 or 1974. Nobody told me I couldn't, and I wasn't bothered about it by the flight attendants.Good point. The dismal era of the passive aggressive cigarette smoker exposed nearly everyone to secondhand poisoning. At least that factor has abated despite the proliferation of dipping and vaping. It just amazes me how some parents defended teen vaping as if they had never learned anything.
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