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gaywrites:

UnitedHealth Group is offering free mental health services to anyone in the country who was emotionally affected by the shooting at Pulse in Orlando – even if you don’t have health insurance.

Optum will operate a 24/7 helpline, and users can speak to a trained mental health professional for as long as they need. Individuals can call toll-free at 866-342-6892. The company is also providing access to their benefits site, which contains mental health information like professional tips on how to manage anxiety.

“The helpline can be an easy, accessible way for people to reach out,” William Bonfield, chief medical officer of OptumHealth Behavioral Solutions, told The Huffington Post. “It can provide support, an opportunity to talk and help a person decide if mental health treatment may be helpful.”

Please please please take advantage of this if you need it! Mental healthcare is so important but can be so freaking expensive, and processing Pulse might take a lot out of you. That’s okay – help is out there. And if you’re looking for someone LGBTQ-specific to talk to, the Trevor Project and Trans Lifeline are available for you too. 

gaywrites

UnitedHealth Group is offering free mental health services to anyone in the country who was emotionally affected by the shooting at Pulse in Orlando – even if you don’t have health insurance.

Optum will operate a 24/7 helpline, and users can speak to a trained mental health professional for as long as they need. Individuals can call toll-free at 866-342-6892. The company is also providing access to their benefits site, which contains mental health information like professional tips on how to manage anxiety.

“The helpline can be an easy, accessible way for people to reach out,” William Bonfield, chief medical officer of OptumHealth Behavioral Solutions, told The Huffington Post. “It can provide support, an opportunity to talk and help a person decide if mental health treatment may be helpful.”

Please please please take advantage of this if you need it! Mental healthcare is so important but can be so freaking expensive, and processing Pulse might take a lot out of you. That’s okay – help is out there. And if you’re looking for someone LGBTQ-specific to talk to, the Trevor Project and Trans Lifeline are available for you too. 

jessicalprice:
“ npr:
“ Back in the 1960s, the U.S. started vaccinating kids for measles. As expected, children stopped getting measles.
But something else happened.
Childhood deaths from all infectious diseases plummeted. Even deaths from diseases...
npr

Back in the 1960s, the U.S. started vaccinating kids for measles. As expected, children stopped getting measles.

But something else happened.

Childhood deaths from all infectious diseases plummeted. Even deaths from diseases like pneumonia and diarrhea were cut by half.

“So it’s really been a mystery — why do children stop dying at such high rates from all these different infections following introduction of the measles vaccine,” says Michael Mina, a postdoc in biology at Princeton University and a medical student at Emory University.

Scientists Crack A 50-Year-Old Mystery About The Measles Vaccine

Photo credit: Photofusion/UIG via Getty Images

jessicalprice

Using computer models, they found that the number of measles cases in these countries predicted the number of deaths from other infections two to three years later.

“We found measles predisposes children to all other infectious diseases for up to a few years,” Mina says.

And the virus seems to do it in a sneaky way.

Like many viruses, measles is known to suppress the immune system for a few weeks after an infection. But previous studies in monkeys have suggested that measles takes this suppression to a whole new level: It erases immune protection to other diseases, Mina says.

VACCINATE. YOUR. DAMN. KIDS. 

househunting

this is not househunting related whatsoever but i have 90k followers and i know many of you live in florida:

Orlando hospitals are in massive need of blood donations after the unbelievable hate crime/terrorist attack (50 dead, 50+ injured) that happened at a gay club last night. 

“There is an urgent need for O Negative, O Positive and AB Plasma blood donors following a mass shooting in Orlando, Florida,” said the news release from OneBlood.

please, if you can, head over to a donation center today, and boost this post. 

Four local OneBlood banks are open today 8 a.m.-4 p.m.:

-Orange Park Donor Center
2153 Kingsley

-South Jacksonville Donor Center
8013 Beach Blvd. (near Parental Home Rd.)

-West Jacksonville Donor Center
5209 Blanding Blvd.

-Mandarin Donor Center
10501 San Jose Blvd

http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/breaking-news/os-orlando-nightclub-shooting-blood-donations-20160612-story.html

http://www.actionnewsjax.com/news/local/urgent-need-for-blood-donations-after-orlando-mass-shooting/338339345

deadmomjokes

Before I start this little spiel, I need you all to know: I’m not hating on people who don’t vaccinate their kids, and while I know for a fact BASED ON facts that vaccines don’t cause autism or other “defects”, I’m all for continuing research to make them even better and safer.

But you know what really, really scares me about the anti-vax movement? As a future Public Health Professional, the thing that scares me most about this is the fact that our cultural mindset has become so CHILL about vaccine-preventable/”childhood” diseases that there is even room for such a movement. Let me explain.

Do y’all know what an R0 is? The R-naught, as it is called, is the basic reproduction rate of a disease. It tells you how many new infections can come from one existing infection. For example, an R-naught of 3 (R3) means that, on average, one sick person will infect three other people. Every disease has an R-naught, some greater and some lesser.

Do you remember when everyone was freaking out about Ebola? Everyone was terrified of catching it, because it’s SOOOOO contagious and deadly, right? Ebola has an R-naught of 2. That’s it. R2. One person with Ebola, on average, will get 2 more people sick. And we were freaking out about that.

Well guess what? Measles is the most contagious disease known to mankind, and it has an R-naught of 18. 18. One person with measles will give it to 18 new people, and those people will give it to 18 new people EACH, and so on. That’s what happened with the Disneyland outbreak; it’s so ridiculously contagious that just ONE sick child was enough to start an epidemic.

And yet very few people are as scared of measles as they are of Ebola. Why is that? One reason could be the nature of the disease, sure; Ebola is terrifying in its progression and symptoms. But I would suggest that a major reason is that measles has been so well-contained by vaccination that people no longer fear it. It’s not a part of every-day life anymore; this disease is no big deal because nobody gets it, because so many people are vaccinated against it. Let’s put this another way.

What are the diseases that scare everyone the most: Ebola, HIV/AIDS, and SARS are pretty high on the list of terror diseases. But let’s look at the R0s, shall we: Ebola-R2. HIV/AIDS-R5. SARS-R5. 

Now let’s look at diseases that people are voluntarily rejecting vaccinations against: Measles, Pertussis, and Diphtheria are the major ones. Their R0s? Measles-R18. Pertussis-R17. Diptheria-R7.

Everyone focuses on the former set of diseases– rightly so, I suppose– because they’re more dangerous at the present time. What makes them more dangerous? Not their R0; it’s the fact that there is no viable treatment, and NO VACCINE. Seriously, that’s why the medical community is worried about them. There’s no way to treat or PREVENT their spread biologically. Well guess what? There’s no viable treatment for Measles or Pertussis, and only limited treatment options for Diphtheria. That’s why the medical community doesn’t focus on them as much, because we can prevent them at the biological level, safely and effectively.

But now that the Anti-Vax movement has taken hold so firmly, the medical community is now being forced to once more worry about diseases it had almost eradicated. And not only that, it’s endangering herd immunity for the people who can’t receive their own vaccines due to compromised immune systems. I’m allergic to eggs, so I can’t receive the flu shot, but I’m also asthmatic so I can’t get the inhaled vaccine. I rely entirely on the people I associate with to keep me safe from the flu by getting their yearly shot. This made public school a living nightmare, because almost NOBODY got their shot. They caught it, and while it didn’t affect them TOO terribly because they were generally healthy, when I caught it, it was very dangerous because of my asthma. And then there’s that time when I caught the flu, and then right after because of my weakened immune system, I caught Whooping Cough from someone who hadn’t been vaccinated. I HAD been vaccinated, but my body was so fatigued from the flu that it couldn’t keep up with immune demands. And so I caught it.

Have you ever had Pertussis (whooping cough)? It’s hard enough on someone with full lung capacity; it can break ribs, it makes you cough so hard. You cough until there is literally no air in your lungs, and you have to inhale so forcefully it makes the “whooping” sound that gives it the name. It’s painful beyond belief, and it can last for weeks. Some people will survive it. But add that to asthma, or to a young child, or to an elderly person, and you are looking at either permanent damage or death, no exceptions. When I had it, I was about 6 years old, and asthmatic; I spent 81 hours awake because the coughing was so violent I physically couldn’t sleep. I tore abdominal muscles. I vomited during coughing fits and aspirated the vomit. I was actively dying. The doctors could barely suppress the cough enough for me to breathe at all. My inhaler wasn’t helping, none of the cough syrups or breathing treatments were helping; I was getting pneumonia on top of the virus. It was Hell. I was LUCKY that I didn’t die.

Who would wish that on their child? Nobody, I hope. And if you KNEW you could keep your child from ever experiencing that, wouldn’t you do whatever it took to ensure their safety?

Or would you look at the safeguard and say, “Nah. I’ll take my chances with my child’s life.”?

That is what the anti-vax movement is doing. Perhaps not purposefully, but that’s the end result. These aren’t just names on syringes designed to make a child cry; the diseases are real, and real threats to health and life, and the vaccines are how you prevent them. Yet we are so far removed from the impact and effects of these diseases BECAUSE of the peace brought to us BY vaccines that people now feel no qualm about refusing vaccines.

That’s what scares me about the anti-vax movement; people have become so complacent that they no longer worry about these very real, very deadly diseases. They’d rather risk their child’s life than get a shot? The side effects of vaccines are unproven (nonexistent), but the efficacy of vaccines are very much proven.

When the pertussis vaccine first came out, people jumped on it right away. They were so grateful to have it, and for a while everything was smooth sailing, and whooping cough was on the decline. Then, in the 70s, some groups started claiming the pertussis vaccine was causing brain injury in young children. Less than 50 in 15 million cases were reported, but it was enough to scare people away from the vaccine. And children began dying again. It was later discovered that it was NOT the vaccine, but the result of infantile epilepsy, that caused the brain damage. People began once more vaccinating their children, but not before hundreds if not thousands had died.

And that’s what’s happening now. A falsified claim scared just enough people that time-tested, lab-tested, fully-proven, totally safe vaccines are being rejected, and we’re already starting to pay with lives. And I’m scared it’s going to get worse. People don’t really grasp the full import of these diseases and the necessity of the vaccines until they have experienced the disease. I’m scared that it’s going to come down to new epidemics before people will realize the mistake of not vaccinating.

Right now we’re still in the semi-safe zone. Enough of the population is immunized that we could probably keep most pandemics of these diseases at bay. But if this movement keeps gaining momentum, there might come a day when measles and pertussis could once again destroy thousands of people yearly. Imagine if some terrorist group weaponized Ebola and used it against this country; so many people would die, because we have no vaccine for it, no way to prevent it. That is what could happen with diseases like mumps, rubella, measles, pertussis, Diphtheria, and polio. Except it wouldn’t be terrorists using a disease as a weapon; it would be some kid in your child’s class, or your neighbor across the street, or the guy who delivers the mail to your office. That’s how life used to be, and if someone from the pre-vaccine era could see us now, they’d weep for joy at the idea that we can prevent these horrific diseases; and then they’d weep in sorrow at the idea that people are voluntarily turning down that safeguard.

It’s true, vaccines aren’t always 100% effective; I was immunized, but still got Whooping Cough (lowered immune function, if you recall). But you know who didn’t get it? My baby sister. My big sister. My cousins. My mother and father. My classmates, the other kids at my doctor’s office. The nurses at the hospital. The pharmacy workers. Their children. The kids my mom taught at school. All those people were safe because of vaccines. And you know what else? When I was in India, I was exposed to polio. Didn’t get it. Know why? I was vaccinated. I was exposed to chicken pox in 5th grade. One unvaccinated kid got it, and the other 4 kids in our class who weren’t vaccinated got it. But you know who didn’t? The rest of us who WERE vaccinated.


Vaccination may not be perfect, and the only way we will improve them is by continuing research. But the fact remains that as they are now, vaccines cause no lasting side effects (injection site pain goes away), and are extremely effective at preventing dangerous, painful, debilitating, often deadly diseases. Let’s keep researching, yes, but in the mean time, PLEASE vaccinate. It’s not worth your life, or your child’s, or anyone else’s. Vaccines save lives, not destroy them.

deadmomjokes

Just a reminder for flu season, and with everyone going back to school. Vaccines are safe, effective, and vaccination saves lives. Go get your boosters if you haven’t yet or aren’t sure if you’re behind; it’s a day or two of arm discomfort in exchange for your life. That’s a pretty safe bet to me.

themarchrabbit

And please

Remember that not everyone can get vaccinations, and are depending on you to keep herd immunity so they can go to the grocery store. Like the person in chemo, getting a Coke at Safeway at two in the morning.

medieisme

I’m from Newfoundland and a child of older parents so my mother can remember when most of these diseases were not available or outright didn’t exist. Believe me, it’s a FUN MOMENT to listen to your mother describing houses in her town with a big quarantine sign on the front because of whatever disease someone in their family contracted. She talks about families who lost multiple children to these diseases. One story that’s stuck with me was a family under quarantine with diphtheria; they had to pass their dead children through a window to the people outside. They couldn’t even attend the funerals because they couldn’t leave the house.

She remembers this. It’s not a story in a history book. It’s something she remembers watching. You bet your ass I had every vaccination she could give me. I did manage to catch the chicken pox before I could be vaccinated for it, but other than that?

I got my damn shots. I don’t have kids. I don’t have plans for children, but if I did?

They would be too. Because I try to picture what it must’ve been like for parents to watch their child stop breathing, then have to wrap that little one up in sheets and PASS THEM THROUGH A FUCKING WINDOW and not even have the chance to go to the funeral and say goodbye.

This is not a ‘maybe this will happen’. This is a ‘it already has’. It’s happened more than once and will again if the antivax movement has anything to say about it.

elfwreck

This is what we need. More reminders of how horrible diseases were for communities before vaccines, more stories about how they impact families, not more statistics and yelling at parents who are trying to pick what’s right for their kids.

They are choosing not to vaccinate, not because they are “stupid” or “delusional,” but because the risks of the diseases aren’t real to them, not like the risks of vaccination are. And those risks may be very tiny indeed–but they can understand them; the risks of the disease are so removed, and so often couched in weird “well, I don’t care if your kid dies, but I don’t want your kid infecting mine” language… that’s not likely to convince anyone.

vulgarweed

I think everyone who swallows the anti-vax bullshit should be forced to take a thorough tour of older cemetery and look at every single child’s grave. There will be a LOT of children’s graves. Children died like flies before vaccines were widespread, because they’re very vulnerable to communicable diseases. Make them look at every single teeny weeny little grave with the dates very close together, and make sure they know exactly what that child died of. If it’s a decent-sized urban cemetery, this could take several days to a week. Make them do it, make them hear it.

Those risks were very real within living memory. I know I bang on about how important it is to know history. This is a case where lack of understanding of history - and inability to empathize with people just like us who lived just a few decades ago - actually KILLS.

Because these parents are too young to personally remember mass deaths from diseases that have largely been controlled BY VACCINES, they think the threat is gone. If they don’t care about history at all, they might not know that it even existed. (Even though that’s the REASON why historical “average life spans” are so low. Do you really think that in the 17th century, adults usually dropped dead at 35? Of course they didn’t. The reason the average life expectancy was so low is because the child mortality rate was so high. If you made it to 30 back then, you had a pretty good chance of making it to 70. The problem was that so many people never made it even to 10. Why? CHILDHOOD DISEASES, that’s why.) The handful of decades it’s been kept at bay are not even a blink of an eye in historical terms.

Vaccines are what holds that threat at bay. It is not gone. It’s not even close to gone. It’s waiting for relaxation of vigilance.

dodostad

Man, this is so important. I got whooping cough at 17, broke my ribs, had high fever for weeks, and then passed it to my unsuspecting mom; my mom who worked with infant children. It could have turned real ugly. And the thing is, I and my classmates caught it from a public pool. I’m afraid to think how many kids got it there. Please vax your kids

fivefeetfitness:
“ fivefeetfitness:
“ Guys, I know a lot of the time you don’t read anything I do, and that’s fine, but can we please get this out there. Please reblog because this man deserves to see his family while he still has life in him....
fivefeetfitness

Guys, I know a lot of the time you don’t read anything I do, and that’s fine, but can we please get this out there. Please reblog because this man deserves to see his family while he still has life in him. Please, please reblog


http://www.gofundme.com/58yyap47


“DON LUCHO” (LUZ RAMIREZ), AS HIS LOVING FAMILY CALLS HIM. BEGAN HIS FIGHT AGAINST A SILENT CANCER LONG BEFORE HE WAS DIAGNOSED. HE CAME TO USA TO SUPPORT HIS FAMILY. HE WORK TWO JOBS. ON A REGULAR DAY OF WORK HE WAS NOT HIMSELF, HE FELT WEAK, AND HE FELT SICK, LIKE HIS BODY WAS GIVING UP ON HIM. HE WAS RUSHED TO THE ER AT HINSDALE HOSPITAL WERE TEST WERE DONE. HE WAS DIAGNOSED WITH SPINAL CORD TUMOR. THE DOCTORS GAVE THE FAMILY RAMIREZ VERY LITTLE HOPE.

AS THE CANCER PROGRESSES DON LUCHO’S AND THE FAMILY RAMIREZ LAST WISH IS TO TRANSFER HIM TO MEXICO TO SEE HIS WIFE AND FAMILY ONE MORE TIME. ITS BEEN YEARS THAT DON LUCHO HAS SEEN HIS FAMILY IN MEXICO.

I ASK PLEASE EVERYONE FRIENDS AND FAMILY, FROM THE BOTTOM OF YOUR HEART IF YOU CAN CONTRIBUTE WITH ANY DONATIONS. AS DON LUCHO CONTINUES TO FIGHT FOR HIS LIFE. AS WELL AS ARE KIND THOUGHTS AND PRAYERS. THE FAMILY RAMIREZ WOULD GLADLY APPRECIATE IT.

Thank you so much for taking the time to read this and please share this post with your friends.

sincerely,

The Ramirez Family.

GOD BLESS YOU ALL.

Please, he’s made $8000 so far we can help him go in peace . You all know you would wish To leave this earth with your loved ones surrounding you.

Even just one dollar . I know not everyone can donate but please please reblog


Thank you

fivefeetfitness

Please my Latino followers
All my followers
Just reblog it
I’ve seen people reblog things to get someone a puppy
Let this man be with his family
Don’t let him die alone

edgebug

sincerely, a person who has been on prozac for 9 years

this is in response to some shitty stuff i’ve seen on my dash recently. it’s super simplified, so if you’d like to know some more indepth stuff on how exactly it works, google it—OR BETTER YET actually talk to a mental health doctor psychiatrist person wow

puke-ahontas

Prozac has literally stopped me killing myself. I would be dead if it weren’t for antidepressants. If you spread misinformation I’ll come to your house and smack u into orbit.

queenspritzee

I’ll join you and steamroll people

dietcokereba

As someone who takes the highest dosage of zoloft (setraline) possible for my body in order to function as a “normal” human being, allow me to assure you that if I ever hear you talking shit about needing to take meds, I will pull your head out of your arse and smack it into the nearest wall.

nudityandnerdery

This is good, the one thing I’ll point out is that sometimes antidepressants will make you numb- it’s happened to me and my sister- but that’s a sign you’re on the wrong one. So if it happens, go back to your doctor and say you want to try a new one.

intangible-rice

When I was 17 my appendix ruptured because I thought I was just having period cramps and didn’t go to the hospital so don’t tell me PMS symptoms are no big deal

one-lastmiracle

this actually happened to me during my math final and i didn’t think anything of it and when i was later admitted to the hospital my math prof was asking me ‘you didn’t have to take the final! why didn’t you tell me it hurt?!?!’ and i told him i’ve had cramps worse.

he gave me 100

bitch-jerk-assbutt-teamfreewill

This is actually an extremely common occurrence simply because in sex ed they don’t teach you how to tell the difference between menstrual cramps and other more serious pains. The way to tell the difference between cramps and appendicitis is that while menstrual cramps are generalized toward the middle of the stomach below the belly button, pain from a swollen or burst appendix will start in the middle of the stomach and relocate to only the lower right side, even lower than menstrual cramps, and is a very localized pain. It also comes on extremely suddenly and will worsen over time or when you make a sudden movement, like a cough or a sneeze.

Basically, if you’re feeling any sort of pain, even if it’s menstrual cramps, don’t hesitate to tell the school nurse or a parent, or if you’re out of school and home even make a doctor’s appointment. Chances are if your cramps are that bad there’s something they can do to improve that as well.

vandigo

I am boosting the shit out of that reply, because I am twenty-fucking-five years old and did not know how to tell the two pains apart

teacupdream

Adding another diagnostic tool! This is something we use in the ER called the rebound test. Basically, appendicitis and cramps react differently to certain things. If you’re still not sure if you have cramps or appendicitis, take two fingers and press them into your abdomen where the pain is (try repeating this on the lower right quadrant of the abdomen just to be sure.)

When you press in firmly, it will probably hurt. Here’s the test: LET GO. Does it get better or get worse? Appendicitis will immediately hurt worse when you let go. Cramps will not. Go to the ER if the rebound test makes it worse!

rainbowrowell

THE REBOUND TEST IS REALLY IMPORTANT.

My husband got sent home from the ER with a rupturing appendix. When he came back and was rushed into surgery, the surgeon was super angry – “Why didn’t anyone do the rebound test?!”

theyarnmonster

why do anti-self dxers think that medical professionals have more knowledge capability than a non-professional?

I’m in a medical family, doctors, surgeons, nurses, cna’s, psychologists, mental health workers- the lot. Trust me, the amount of training they get on certain topics is nominal at best.

In four years of study- two weeks are on a nutrition rotation. If I research for six months on reputable websites, read the same journals (which is quite easy) then yes, I have indeed learned more than they did in two weeks.

Medical school does not magically give someone super powers. It also doesn’t guarantee that a healthcare worker knows more than I do- especially about my own mind. Repeat- Especially about my own mind.

If you’re anti self-dx, do you think people who are ‘truly disabled’ are too stupid, too vapid, too untrustworthy, too incapable of learning to ever attain the same knowledge as a non-disabled person?

Do you think disabled people are incapable of discerning scientific websites from internet fluff (despite the fact that we are often online longer than non-disabled people)?

Is this is why you don’t believe us no matter how many times we tell you the facts, the reasons why self-dx is a valid tool for Autistic people?

Do you think Autistic people are sub-par and that we don’t have the same capabilities as a non-autistic person?

gendercriticalmass

Some doctors at a hospital in my city wouldn’t diagnose my friends’ son as autistic because he could hold a conversation, completely unaware that autistic people use scripts all the fucking time. His mothers happened to have already taught him the script for the prompt they gave.

Allistic doctors don’t know shit half the time. Some do know what they are talking about, but even then we will know ourselves better then they will know us.

Hell, because we know ourselves better is the reason that my therapist wasn’t comfortable talking about me being autistic (he thought I was) unless I did my own research and found that it resonated with me.

spacegate

GODDAMNIT.

My BF’s eye ulcer came back, and yesterday we went to the eye doctor and they put on a medical contact and told him it will last the week. Well, now they call TODAY and say it needs to come out TODAY or else he’ll get an eye infection.

Also they double charged his account so now he’s in the red.

Also they want 10 grand for an eye surgery on MONDAY. They do not take payment plans. all payment is due as soon as you walk in the door.

So I’m trying to raise money for the doctor appointment to get the contact removed today….and it’s 400 dollars. I hate this country uahguaghg.

I got two hours to get as much as I can. So any help would be appreciated! Reusing a previous donation page cause I don’t have much time.

Thanks guys! Plz signal boost!

kittyit

she was 5′ 4″ and 125 pounds.. so they were going by her bmi but she probably wasn’t visibly fat/thought of by fat by everyone who saw her?? this shows medically sanctioned & societally accepted sizeism hurts (and kills) thin/small people too.. maybe ya’ll will start thinking about it!

mertvechyna

oh yea: the dental surgeon informed me that if u smoke weed regularly u should always tell the anaesthesiologist before ur surgery, because it’s possible that u could wake up during surgery due to them giving u the dosage they would give someone who doesn’t smoke weed. 

so don’t lie, they aren’t cops, they just want to make sure ur good for the duration of the surgery. i didn’t know this for my colonoscopy but i wasn’t smoking regularly then so it wasn’t relevant. just a psa

liquidcoma

Its Tru. I have woken up during anaesthesia and it is not fun u will not like it

aroacelukeskywalker:
“nursenotes:
“1. Fist: Make a fist around the epi-pen, don’t place your thumb/fingers over either end
2. Flick the blue cap off
3. Fire. Press down into the outer thigh (the big muscle in there), hold for 10 seconds before...
nursenotes

1. Fist: Make a fist around the epi-pen, don’t place your thumb/fingers over either end

2. Flick the blue cap off

3. Fire. Press down into the outer thigh (the big muscle in there), hold for 10 seconds before removing (the orange cap will cover the needle). Bare skin is best but the epi-pen will go through clothing. Avoid pockets and seams. 

- Ring an ambulance even if everything seems to be fine!

aroacelukeskywalker

Oh my god.
So as someone who has to carry an epipen EVERYWHERE I am so happy to see that there’s an info post about them.
Like in the extreme case that I can’t inject myself, somebody else would have to do it, but nobody knows how to do it! Thank you, this may just save my life some day.

peoplepowermovement:
“Cuba Eradicates Syphillis, HIV Transmission to Babies
“Cuba to be certified by WHO as the first country in the world to eradicate the transmission of HIV and syphilis from mother to child.
Despite its status as a low-income...
peoplepowermovement

Cuba Eradicates Syphillis, HIV Transmission to Babies

Cuba to be certified by WHO as the first country in the world to eradicate the transmission of HIV and syphilis from mother to child.

Despite its status as a low-income country, Cuba’s medical system is recognized as one of the best in the world.

Despite a barbaric 50+ year embargo imposed by the United States government, Cuba can still provide stellar healthcare and quality education, free for all its people.

ironicdavestrider:
“This picture kind of showcases what the #transdayofvisibility means to me. It shows that trans people don’t have a certain look about us; because this day for us is to celebrate the diversity of our community. This was taken last...
ironicdavestrider

This picture kind of showcases what the #transdayofvisibility means to me. It shows that trans people don’t have a certain look about us; because this day for us is to celebrate the diversity of our community. This was taken last night, 3/30/2015. As much as I would like to hold off my illnesses for the sake of posting only my conventionally attractive selfies, that’s just not how it works.

I am a chronically ill, neurodivergent, intersex, queer trans person and I am still proud of every part of myself! The “ugly” parts of my identity like the chronic illness are just as much “me” as my orientation and my gender.

Shout out to my fellow disabled trans people. We deserve the visibility too and there is no shame in sharing pictures that show who you are. 

#