Friday, June 26, 2020

As Good As You Can The PA Model Around the World - Part One

Welcome to part one of this powerful nine-part miniseries detailing filmmaker Adam Halbur's spectacular new documentary film about the PA model around the world. Make sure to sign up below to receive all the posts in this series. View all posts in this seriesAs Good As You Can: The PA Model Around the World Part OneAmerican Cheese: The Origin of the U.S. Physician AssistantPAs in the Netherlands: The Dutch Physician AssistantWhy We Really Need PAs in The UK: The British Physician AssociateMeet The PA Pioneers of Israel: The Israeli Physician AssistantTrials and Tribulations of the Liberian Physician AssistantSouth Africa’s Clinical Associate (Clin-A): The PA Model Around The World "I genuinely believe that the PAs I met along the way have been given the opportunity of great lives, and I thank them for allowing this lone coyote an attempt, in the very least, of placing their story amidst the stars." - Adam Halbur, documentary filmmaker Documenting The PA Model Around the World Adam Halbur is a filmmaker and poet who went around the world in 2017 documenting the PA model in nine countries: the US, UK, Netherlands, Israel, South Africa, Liberia, India, Australia, and Laos. He then made a film about it! This is the first post of a nine-part series in which we will take a deep dive into the film and spotlight pioneers of the PA profession trailblazing new paths around the globe. In each post, we will cover one of the nine countries in detail, along with never before seen footage and compelling interviews provided especially for you by the filmmaker. Why Make a Film about PAs? Many outside the PA profession questioned Adam why he would invest time and money circumnavigating the globe, filming physician assistants. To which, he graciously replied: "Ibn Sina, one of the greatest Medieval physicians, said, Width of life is more important than the length of life, a sentiment shared by one of India's greatest founding politicians, B.R. Ambedkar: Life should be great rather than long. Taken superficially, this is a clich a travel agent might pitch but more boldly calls us to devote ourselves to what we believe in with no hope of recognition or return on our investment." Physician Assistant Number 180 Though very well-paid now, Dick Halbur, the filmmaker's father, began his career as an early physician assistant (PA #180 in Wisconsin to be exact). As a PA pioneer, Dick wholeheartedly devoted himself to the PA profession despite being overworked, underpaid, and his new profession tottering on the verge of collapse for over a decade. But his father, a farmer's son, understood the meaning of hard work and enjoyed chewing the fat (conversing) with the rural folk he treated. He enjoyed addressing their needs and gaining their confidence. Also, like many PAs who followed in his footsteps, Dick didn't always know that he wanted to be a physician assistant. Adam, the filmmaker, came to know some of his dad's patients in person and by word of mouth and so developed his own devotion to the story. This is best illustrated in a poem Adam published over a decade ago that demonstrates medicine's influence in his writing: Like the Earth, the heart is a Badlands. There's really no love, as they say there is, just a quiet between the systolic push of red along channels of the chest: An evening thunderstorm, let's say, lightning, a rush of muddy waters trenching the canyon walls and a clearing where a coyote places constellations of river stones in the sky. "I truly believe that the PAs I met along the way have been given the opportunity of great lives, and I thank them for allowing this lone coyote an attempt, in the very least, of placing their story amidst the stars." - Adam Halbur, documentary filmmaker (seen here in the white shirt) A Preview of What's to Come in This Blog Series PAs In The United Kingdom Watkins is one of six original PAs to graduate from one of three pilot programs in the UK, namely St. Georges, which she then joined as staff in 2008: Why We Really Need PAs in The UK: The British Physician Associate PAs In The Netherlands The Netherlands is one country in which the PA has been implemented not merely on a trial basis but as a long-term government solution to rising healthcare demands and costs. It is also a country where everyone is covered by the national healthcare plan regardless of income. PAs in the Netherlands: The Dutch Physician Assistant PAs In India During filming in 2017, there were no PA programs or PAs practicing in northern and northeastern parts of India. The government is slow to hire PAs, and without avenues of career advancement or a standard of living comparable with western counterparts, eventually, most PAs migrate to other industries or abroad. And many more countries will be covered as part of this series! For the Love of the PA Profession To say that I am grateful for Adam and his commitment to creating global awareness and understanding of the PA profession is a gross understatement. As Good As You Can: The PA Model Around the World is a beautiful, meaningful, and timely piece of work. The footage from these interviews is a behind the scenes journey into the minds of heroes and trailblazers of our profession. Join me as we begin our journey around the world with PAs leading the charge for better, more cost-effective, patient-oriented care. We will be starting here in the good old U.S of A in the first of our extraordinary nine-part series, titled American Cheese: The Patenting of the U.S. PA. If you are at all interested in global health or the history of the PA profession, then you won't want to miss this series. I'll see you soon for post #2, and in the meantime, make sure to sign up using the form below to receive email notifications. Also, please consider supporting filmmaker Adam Halbur's incredible work by making a $25 contribution to the development and marketing of his film through this link. Be Notified of The Next Post View all posts in this seriesAs Good As You Can: The PA Model Around the World Part OneAmerican Cheese: The Origin of the U.S. Physician AssistantPAs in the Netherlands: The Dutch Physician AssistantWhy We Really Need PAs in The UK: The British Physician AssociateMeet The PA Pioneers of Israel: The Israeli Physician AssistantTrials and Tribulations of the Liberian Physician AssistantSouth Africas Clinical Associate (Clin-A): The PA Model Around The World You may also like -Where PAs and Physician Associates Can Work Internationally The contemporary physician assistant/associate (PA) movementbegan in North America and Africa in the mid-1960s. As of 2018, the adoption of PAs has spread globally across a variety of health systems and at least fifteen countries []Make a Difference Train the Next Generation of PAs in Sub-Saharan Africa as a Clinical Associates MentorNote:The Clinical Associates twinning partnerships in South Africa are made possible through the support of the US Presidents Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in South []PAs in the Netherlands: The Dutch Physician Assistant Welcome to part two of this powerful nine-part miniseries by documentary filmmaker Adam Halbur on the physician assistant model around the world. The Advent of the Dutch Physician Assistant I met Quinten van den Driesschen, a []

Monday, June 1, 2020

Research Paper on Snowboarding

Research Paper on Snowboarding Snowboarding is a relatively new winter sport, at least in comparison to skiing that has evolved from the activity done by northern peoples for thousands of years. It, however, grows even more popular and is very likely to become more wide-spread than its natural predecessor, skiing. Nevertheless, it is somewhat less accessible, for in order to truly see and feel what it is to be snowboarding, one has to go to the mountains, while skiing can be done on the flat surface as well. The first snowboard was created in 1964 by Shervin Popper, who was inspired by seeing his daughter trying to slide down the hill while standing on a sled. He made a crude construction of two pairs of skis, gave it to her daughter, and after a demonstration all the local children wanted to have something of this kind as well. The first snowboard ever was a tremendous success in that neighborhood. In the course of the following decades a number of different people who had nothing to do with each other started to produce similar contrivances, sometimes on a mass scale. Still, it wasn’t until the early eighties, when the snowboard started to make appearances in a number of sports’ magazines and on TV in the USA and Canada. However, the major public still treated snowboarding as somewhat too peculiar to be considered seriously. Since then, however, it gained popularity steadily and was accepted in many sets of winter sports, becoming an integral part of any winter competition. Nowadays, it is equally liked and