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Saturday, November 28, 2009

Baby Pool

OK everyone.....we're getting so close to Baby Voelkel's arrival!! AJ and I have set up a pool for everyone to guess when the little guy will get here, how much he will weigh and how long he will be, and the most important....what his name will be! We're looking forward to seeing what everyone guesses....we'll see who wins once he gets here!

Just go to:

http://bebepool.com/voelkel

Will update the blog again soon.....but everything's going well so far....only 19 more days!

Sunday, November 15, 2009

35 weeks

Everything's still going well on the baby front....his HR was in the 140's at our visit on Thursday and he just continues to grow every day!! His kicks and rolls are so strong I just know he's going to be born with some major guns and a nice 6-pack! :) jk....that would be a little freaky!

Here's a pic of the baby bump now at 35wks and 2 days:


Here's what's supposedly going on with him now:

Your baby doesn't have much room to maneuver now that he's over 18 inches long and tips the scales at 5 1/4 pounds (pick up a honeydew melon). Because it's so snug in your womb, he isn't likely to be doing somersaults anymore, but the number of times he kicks should remain about the same. His kidneys are fully developed now, and his liver can process some waste products. Most of his basic physical development is now complete — he'll spend the next few weeks putting on weight.

Sunday, November 8, 2009

34 weeks and counting!

AJ and I are so excited!! We cannot wait to meet our little guy in just a few weeks! We are now 34 weeks along and here's what's supposedly going on with him now:

Your baby now weighs about 4 3/4 pounds (like your average cantaloupe) and is almost 18 inches long. His fat layers — which will help regulate his body temperature once he's born — are filling him out, making him rounder. His skin is also smoother than ever. His central nervous system is maturing and his lungs are continuing to mature as well. If you've been nervous about preterm labor, you'll be happy to know that babies born between 34 and 37 weeks who have no other health problems generally do fine. They may need a short stay in the neonatal nursery and may have a few short-term health issues, but in the long run, they usually do as well as full-term babies.

I can definitely tell you he feels like he weighs more than 4 3/4 lbs!! He gets bigger every single day!!! (at least my belly does anyway!) I have been having multiple Braxton-Hicks contractions daily, but overall baby and I are very healthy. I got both the regular seasonal flu vaccine and the H1N1 vaccine....so we are covered there! It is kind of a bummer though....having him this time of year the hospital's policy right now is no visitors under the age of 18 and they recommend no visitors under the age of 18 for the first two weeks at home....that's kind of a problem when you have as many nieces and nephews as I do!! Sorry everyone!! I'm still working right now and plan to until D-day. Sleeping is not going so well right now....with all the bathroom visits and not being able to get comfortable....I guess my body's just getting me used to the lack of sleep when he arrives!! Still working in the nursery, but still no crib!! Seriously...why does it take 14 weeks for a crib to be delivered!!

AJ's sister and mom threw a wonderful baby shower for us about 2 weeks ago....everything was perfect and we had a great turnout of family and friends!!
Here are some pics from that day:





Baby and I had a great time and truly appreciate all the hard work Aunt Christa and Grandma Voelkel put in to throwing Baby Voelkel a wonderful shower!! Thank you so much!!

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

The "Costs" of Medical Care: Part II

Although it is cheaper to buy a pint of milk than to buy a quart of milk, nobody considers that to be lowering the price of milk. Although it is cheaper to buy a lower quality of all sorts of goods than to buy a higher quality, nobody thinks of that as lowering the price of either lower or higher quality goods.

Yet, when it comes to medical care, there seems to be remarkably little attention paid to questions of both quantity and quality, in the rush to "bring down the cost of medical care."

There is no question that you can reduce the payments for medical care by having either a lower quantity or a lower quality of medical care. That has already been done in countries with government-run medical systems.

In the United States, the government has already reduced payments for patients on Medicare and Medicaid, with the result that some doctors no longer accept new patients with Medicare or Medicaid. That has not reduced the cost of medical care. It has reduced the availability of medical care, just as buying a pint of milk reduces the payment below what a quart of milk would cost.

Letting old people die instead of saving their lives will undoubtedly reduce medical payments considerably. But old people have that option already-- and seldom choose to exercise it, despite clever people who talk about a "duty to die."

A government-run system will take that decision out of the hands of the elderly or their families, and thereby "bring down the cost of medical care." A stranger's death is much easier to take, especially if you are a bureaucrat making that decision in Washington.

At one time, in desperately poor societies, living on the edge of starvation, old people might be abandoned to their fate or even go off on their own to face death alone. But, in a society where huge flat-screen TVs are common, along with a thousand gadgets for amusement and entertainment, and where even most people living below the official poverty line own a car or truck, to talk about a "duty to die" so that younger people can live it up is obscene.

You can even save money by cutting down on medications to relieve pain, as is already being done in Britain's government-run medical system. You can save money by not having as many high-tech medical devices like CAT scans or MRIs, and not using the latest medications. Countries with government-run medical systems have less of all these things than the United States has.

But reducing these things is not "bringing down the cost of medical care." It is simply refusing to pay those costs-- and taking the consequences.

For those who live by talking points, one of their biggest talking points is that Americans do not get any longer life span than people in other Western nations by all the additional money we spend on medical care.

Like so many clever things that are said, this argument depends on confusing very different things-- namely, "health care" and "medical care." Medical care is a limited part of health care. What we do and don't do in the way we live our lives affects our health and our longevity, in many cases more so than what doctors can do to provide medical care.

Americans have higher rates of obesity, homicide and narcotics addiction than people in many other Western nations. There are severe limits on what doctors and medical care can do about that.

If we are serious about medical care-- and we should be serious, since it is a matter of life and death-- then we should have no time for clever statements that confuse instead of clarifying.

If we want to compare the effects of medical care, as such, in the United States with that in other countries with government-run medical systems, then we need to compare things where medical care is what matters most, such as survival rates of people with cancer.

The United States has one of the highest rates of cancer survival in the world-- and for some cancers, the number one rate of survival.

We also lead the world in creating new life-saving pharmaceutical drugs. But all of this can change-- for the worse-- if we listen to clever people who think they should be running our lives.

Thomas Sowell