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By HANS DUVEFELT, MDGrowing up in Sweden without a Thanksgiving holiday, Christmas has been a time for me to reflect on ...
21/12/2020

By HANS DUVEFELT, MD

Growing up in Sweden without a Thanksgiving holiday, Christmas has been a time for me to reflect on where I am and where I have been and New Year’s is when I look forward.

I have written different kinds of�Christmas reflections before: sometimes in jest, asking Santa for a better EMR; sometimes filled with compassion for physicians or patients who struggle during the holidays. I have also borrowed original sentences from Osler’s writings to imagine how he would address physicians in the present time.

This year, with the pandemic changing both medicine and so many aspects of life in general, and with a gut wrenching political battle that threatens to erupt in anarchy or civil war within the next few weeks or months, my thoughts run deep toward the soul of medicine, the purpose of being a good doctor, even being a good human being.

We live in ideological silos, protected from dissenting opinions. News is not news if it is unpopular. Fake news and fake science are concepts that seemed marginal before but have now entered the mainstream.

As a physician, I serve whoever comes to see me to the best of my ability. But this year I have had to pay extra attention to the fact that so many people have already made up their minds about the nature and severity of the pandemic we are living with. If they don’t believe the country’s top experts, they are not likely to believe in me. Still, I try to gently state that we are still trying to figure this thing out and until we do, it’s better to be cautious.

I am starting to read about what some are now calling the Fourth Wave of the pandemic, the mental health crisis this winter may see in the wake of the physical illness we are surrounded by.

With this raging pandemic and the pandemonium it has created in our personal lives and the lives of those around us, we as doctors need to keep our priorities straight:

A physician’s mission is to ease suffering.

We save lives when we can.

But sometimes, all we can do is help inevitable death happen with dignity and without unnecessary suffering.

Because we have seen suffering and death in our work, our words of experience and our empathy can help others.

We are all mental health workers in the eyes of our patients.

We must work hard to the best of our abilities.

But we cannot sacrifice our own health in the process.

We must put our own oxygen mask on first, as during in-flight emergencies.

We must accept that bad things happen in spite of our efforts.

We must accept that in life, there is no light without darkness, no joy without sorrow, and no good without evil.

We must recognize that we need to make every day count, because time, and life itself, is a finite resource.

Life is certainly messy, confusing and unpredictable. And while scientists and politicians may be using their brains for thinking of ways out of the situation the world is now in, the rest of us, doctors on the frontlines, are hunkering down in our shrunken worlds – reconnecting with the soulful, inconsistent underpinnings of who we really are but were perhaps too busy to really think about, recommitting to easing suffering, one patient at a time.

Remember Hippocrates: “Ars longa, vita brevis, occasio praeceps, experimentum periculosum, iudicium difficile†— “Life is short, the art is long, opportunity fleeting, experiment treacherous, judgment difficult.â€

Hans Duvefelt is a Swedish-born rural Family Physician in Maine. This post originally appeared on his blog, A Country Doctor Writes, here.

By HANS DUVEFELT, MD Growing up in Sweden without a Thanksgiving holiday, Christmas has been a time for me to reflect on where I am and where I have been and New Year’s is when I look forward. I have written different kinds of Christmas reflections before: sometimes in jest, asking Santa for a ...

No take out take out Kung Pao Shrimp takes half the time to make as it does to go out and pick up. Plus, (Bonus!) it has...
19/12/2020

No take out take out Kung Pao Shrimp takes half the time to make as it does to go out and pick up. Plus, (Bonus!) it has a ton more flavor and you get to control the ingredients. If you love Kung Pao Shrimp at a restaurant you are going to love this recipe.

Kung Pao Shrimp

Kung Pao Chicken used to be my favorite Chinese dish until we make Kung Pao Shrimp. Great! Now, I’ve added major confusion in my life with additional Kung Pao Choices!!!! Haha. Seriously, this recipe takes less than 20 minutes to make and is bursting with spicy flavors.

We love going out to a great restaurant for a fun meal, but there are times where you just can’t go out for some reason. If you live in an area like where we live it takes a good 20 minutes to get to the closest Chinese restaurant…..and I guarantee, during the winter, its going to be cold by the time you get home!!!! With this recipe, you know it will be ready to serve AND, the taste is just awesome. Don’t forget, you’ll want to have it a second night so make sure to double the recipe.

Cutting the Calories

We cut out a lot of the oil normally used when making Kung Pao Shrimp. When cooking the shrimp some of the sauce will stick to the pan. Don’t worry about that because when the sauce is added it will deglaze the pan. Using less oil does not change the great flavor of the Kung Pao Shrimp. In fact, I think the flavor is better with less oil.

Replace the rice with cauliflower rice. One cup of rice is 200+ calories compared to one cup of cauliflower rice that’s 25 calories. On a side note, the sauce in this dish is so good it will go great with either your favorite rice or cauliflower. Really, this dish is so good rice isn’t even needed! You won’t miss the rice flavor and it cuts out a ton of calories. Seriously, however you decide to enjoy it; with or without rice, you can’t go wrong with this recipe!

Peanuts!

If you have a peanut allergy in your house, substitute the peanuts with cashews or even water chestnuts. We go with peanuts because we have a tree nut allergy in our house. Hey, for a meatless option, the shrimp can even be substituted with cauliflower (and it is delicious!).

TIPS:

This dish is quick and really simple to make.

Make sure to defrost the shrimp and pat them dry with a paper towel.

Measure all the ingredients prior to cooking anything. Grate the ginger and garlic. If everything is ready before starting to cook this dish will be ready in less than 10 minutes.

Place all the ingredients next to the stove before starting to stir fry. It takes a very short amount of time to cook the Kung Pao Shrimp so having everything ready before heating up the wok (or large sauté pan) will save a lot of time.

If the shrimp has that “shrimpy smell”. Click here for this trick it will eliminate the smell of shrimp. It works every time!

Kung Pao Shrimp

Kung Pao Shrimp is full of flavor making your taste buds dance. This No Take out Take out is ready in less than 20 minutes from start to finish!

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Course: Dinner, Lunch, Main Course, Main Dish

Cuisine: Chinese

Prep Time: 10 minutes

Cook Time: 10 minutes

Total Time: 20 minutes

Servings: 4

Calories: 239kcal

Author: Belly Laugh Living

A Few Things We Use

Wok

Spoon

Mixing Bowl

Measuring Spoons

Rice Cooker

Ingredients

Marinade

1 Pound Shrimp

2 Teaspoons Cornstarch

2 Teaspoons Rice Vinegar

1 Tablespoon Light Soy Sauce

Sauce

2 Tablespoons Rice Vinegar Or dry Sherry or rice wine (Sake)

6 Teaspoons Oyster Sauce

1 Tablespoon Sugar Add 2 teaspoon if you want it sweeter

1 Teaspoon Sesame oil

Stir Fry

1 Tablespoon Peanut Oil

2 Cloves Garlic Minced, grated or finely chopped

1/2 Tablespoon Ginger Minced, grated or finely chopped

1/4 Cup Peanuts Dry Roasted or unsalted peanuts

3 Scallions

8 Dried red Chilies Optional – use if you want it spicy

Instructions

Marinade

Remove the shells from the shrimp. Place them in a medium size bowl

Toss the Shrimp in the cornstarch

Add the Soy Sauce and Rice Vinegar. Stir gently to coat the Shrimp

Let stand at room temperature for at least 10 minutes. (no more than 20 minutes)

Sauce

While the Shrimp marinates, mix together the sauce

In a bowl combine the rice vinegar, oyster sauce, sesame oil, and sugar. Stir until the sugar dissolves.

Prepare scallions, garlic, ginger and peanuts

Chop the Scallions.

Measure and chop the peanuts

Chop or mince the garlic and ginger

Start the Stir Fry

Heat a wok or large pan over high heat until a bead of water sizzles and evaporates on contact. Add the Peanut oil and swirl to coat the pan.

Add the chilies (if using) and stir-fry for about 30 seconds

Stir-Fry the chilies until they begin to darken and the oil is slightly fragrant.

Add the Shrimp and stir fry until the Shrimp begin to turn pink – about 2 to 3 minutes

Add the garlic and ginger to the Shrimp. Continue to cook and frequently stir to make sure shrimp doesn't stick. Cook until the shrimp is completely cooked through

Add half the scallion. Stir-fry for about 30 seconds

Prior to adding the sauce with the shrimp make sure to mix the sauce well. This will ensure the sugar is completely dissolved.

Pour in the sauce and mix to coat the Shrimp

Stir in the peanuts and cook for additional 1 to 2 minutes

Transfer the shrimp to a serving place.

Sprinkle the other half of the scallions on top

Serve over rice or cauliflower rice and Enjoy!!!!

Nutrition

Calories: 239kcal | Carbohydrates: 9g | Protein: 27g | Fat: 11g | Saturated Fat: 2g | Cholesterol: 286mg | Sodium: 1384mg | Potassium: 212mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 4g | Vitamin A: 355IU | Vitamin C: 7mg | Calcium: 186mg | Iron: 3mg

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The post Kung Pao Shrimp appeared first on Belly Laugh Living.

Kung Pao Shrimp is full of flavor making your taste buds dance. This No Take out Take takes less than 20 minutes from start to finish!

By MICHAEL E. LIPKIN and RUSSELL S. TERRY, JR.Burnout has always been a concern in medicine, and that concern has been a...
18/12/2020

By MICHAEL E. LIPKIN and RUSSELL S. TERRY, JR.

Burnout has always been a concern in medicine, and that concern has been amplified by the added stress of COVID-19. Many months into an unpredictable and distressing situation, we have both hung on to our mental health and professional passion by seeking out strategies that work for us. We offer them in two perspectives: veteran and relative newcomer. �

Dr. Lipkin: A Veteran’s Perspective

When lockdown began in March, we slowed down my practice for about 6 to 8 weeks, and then returned to full pre-COVID levels. It feels like the uncertainty has affected me most, since it has not been clear if and when things will get substantially better. Everyone is both experiencing and projecting persistent anxiety, stress and uncertainty. Isolation is a problem as well. I no longer have the time or ability to sit down with colleagues and vent over a beer, which was an outlet I counted on to mitigate burnout. At the same time, on a more concrete level, the pandemic has made everything we do incrementally more difficult, which is grindingly stressful. These tips are helping me cope and avoid burnout.

There are so many changes—just accept them. As COVID affects so many areas of practice, there’s a kind of low-grade stress that fluctuates with events. It seems like everything is a little bit harder. We have to shift some patient visits to telehealth and make sure they get COVID tests before surgery. We’re all looking over our shoulders, wondering who’s going to get us sick. There’s always the specter of more shutdowns and how they might affect our livelihoods. Budgets have been cut back, so hiring is frozen and there’s virtually no incremental spending. Everything will stay this way for now, so the best thing to do is accept that we’re going through a tough period and focus on the big picture, rather than the list of irritations.

Look forward to something. The day-to-day grind can get dreary, so plan something to look forward to professionally. You might sign up for a virtual meeting. I like to speak and teach, so I’ve done some industry webinars and an asynchronous course at the American Urological Association. New technology is something to look forward to as well. I’m looking forward to soon trialing the MOSES 2.0 holmium laser for kidney stones. Surgical technologies can make our jobs faster, easier, more enjoyable, and less stressful, so I’m excited to try this new 120Hz holmium laser, which promises to make my work more efficient. We might have a trial for single-use ureteroscopes to look forward to in the future as well.

Get moving—preferably outdoors. I started running during this crisis, and getting outside by myself to exercise has helped me clear my head. Running helps make me feel relaxed. Sometimes it’s hard to garner the motivation to actually do something different, but it pays off if you find something that works for you.

Be thankful. When you’re feeling bogged down in the midst of this crisis, it helps to be thankful for day day-to-day victories. We’re all fortunate to have the opportunity to impact people’s lives in a positive way. It can be wearying at times, but it’s worth being thankful for our work. And the appreciation patients are showing for their physicians right now frankly feels pretty good.

My son now has us do something called “roses, thorns and blooms†at dinner every night, where each of us names something positive that happened that day, something that bothered us, and something we’re looking forward to. It’s been a good reminder for me that good things happen every day, even if they’re small.

Dr. Terry: The Newcomer’s View

In March and April, when everything ground to a halt, I was a second-year fellow at Duke University working on my robotics training. They had to limit staffing to one trainee per OR, so residents covered the reduced caseload and fellows like me worked from home on research and remote tasks like reviewing patient charts. It was a very strange transition. I’d been going in early and staying late through years of college, med school, internship, residency, and fellowship, and then all of a sudden I had to figure out how to fill these quiet, no-structure, work-from-home days.

On the positive side, I got to stay home and spend more time with my 9-month-old daughter than I ever thought would be possible. The downside was the aimlessness, which felt very stressful. I returned to Duke in May and finished my fellowship in mid-August, and then we moved to Gainesville, Florida, where I’ve been settling into new positions at University of Florida and the VA Medical Center during the pandemic. Throughout all this upheaval, a few tips have helped me stay balanced instead of burnt out.

Turn off the news—and call your family. Early in this pandemic, I had to stop watching the news because the overwhelming negativity was stressing me out. I lived and worked in a bubble, and it actually helped a lot. I replaced that focus on the outside world not only with my work and my wife and child, but also with loved ones I suddenly had time to catch up with via phone, text or FaceTime. It’s something I’ve continued because nurturing those close family relationships has been beneficial for my mental health and boosted my resilience, as well as helped my family get through the crisis.

Enjoy your coworkers. During lockdown, isolation from coworkers was tough. Whether we’re venting, telling jokes, or talking about our families, it’s energizing to be around people that are like-minded and enjoy working hard on the team that supports you. One of the most enjoyable parts of coming back to the hospital was getting into the OR with our familiar circulator nurses, scrub nurses and residents. Now I appreciate the people I work with more than ever.

Say no when you need to. One of the most consistent pieces of advice I’ve gotten from mentors is not to feel pressured to say “yes†to everything people ask of me as the new guy. That’s even more important now, when COVID makes many things take longer and require more resources. In addition to my responsibilities with patients, I’m now onboarding at two institutions and moving into a new house, so I’ve tried to restrict extra activities. I was asked to help screen residency applications this year, which is something I normally love to do, but I surprised myself by saying no. It’s the right decision because stretching myself too far could affect the quality of my work and certainly would add to my stress. This is a marathon, not a sprint, and I’m trying to treat it that way for now.

Focus on the good you’re doing. When we came out of lockdown, a triage system moved acute cases to the front. Virtually all of our first cases were high-risk cancers. As an endourologist who does a lot of stone surgery, I was also doing kidney stone procedures on patients whose severe stones had resulted in serious infections. Instead of procedures that improve quality of life, we were doing mostly life-saving surgeries. Operating on people in acute physiological distress felt very meaningful, and it helped create urgency about our work. We were eager to get there every day. The experience has also given me a greater appreciation for all the people and the actions it takes to get our patients to surgery and care for them postoperatively. I see the good we’re all doing as a team.

Michael E. Lipkin, MD, is Urology Clinic Chief and Associate Professor of Surgery at Duke University, Durham, North Carolina.

Russell S. Terry, Jr., MD, is an Assistant Professor and Director of MIS Education and New Technologies at University of Florida in Gainesville.

By MICHAEL E. LIPKIN and RUSSELL S. TERRY, JR. Burnout has always been a concern in medicine, and that concern has been amplified by the added stress of COVID-19. Many months into an unpredictable and distressing situation, we have both hung on to our mental health and professional passion by seekin...

By KIM BELLARDI’ve never seen The Mandalorian.� I don’t have Disney+.  But I know who Baby Yoda is, and I’m pretty s...
17/12/2020

By KIM BELLARD

I’ve never seen The Mandalorian.� I don’t have Disney+. But I know who Baby Yoda is, and I’m pretty sure Disney is counting on that. Hollywood, in case you haven’t been paying attention, is going through some radical changes. There may be some lessons for healthcare in them.

2020 has been the year of streaming. Moviegoing isn’t entirely dead in the pandemic, but it may be on life support, with major chains like Regal and AMC barely staying out of bankruptcy. “Yes, there is pent-up demand to see movies in a theater,†Hollywood insider Peter Chernin told The New York Times. “But people change their habits.â€

Indeed, they do. A new Press Ganey survey found that telemedicine visits shot to 37% of all visits in May, then settled down to around 15% – far above less than 1% pre-COVID-19. Habits do, indeed, change, even in healthcare.

Hollywood has made some startling announcements in the past few weeks that illustrate how swiftly changes are coming to the entertainment industry:

Disney: Disney expects to have 100 new titles – TV shows or movies – each year for the next few years. Disney chairman Bob Iger noted modestly: “The pipeline of original content we’re making is much more robust than originally anticipated.†Of particular note, though, CEO Bob Chapek said, “Of the 100 new titles announced today, 80 percent of them will go to Disney Plus.â€

NYT characterized the move as: “Here is a 97-year-old company making a jump to direct-to-consumer hyperspace.†(If you don’t get the reference, you probably didn’t get the Baby Yoda one either).

The strategy appears to be working. Disney said that its year-old Disney+ streaming service already has 87 million subscribers; it had originally projected to reach this number by 2024. Now it expects to reach 260m subscribers by 2024. And those numbers do not include Disney services Hulu (39m) and ESPN+ (12m). Collectively, Disney now expects up to 350m subscribers by 2024.

Warner Bros: Although Disney expects some of its movies to still have theatrical runs prior to streaming, Warner Bros announced in early December that all of its 2021 releases will be available for streaming on its HBO Max service upon release, rather than after the “traditional†90+ day wait (outside the U.S., where HBO Max is not yet available, the movies will still be in theaters first). It had previously announced that its big 2020 release – Wonder Woman 1984 – would be released this way. Shares of major theater chains dropped precipitously after the latest announcement.

“We see an opportunity to do something firmly focused on the fans, which is to provide choice,†WarnerMedia CEO Jason Kilar wrote. That’s all well and good, but it’s worth noting that Warner Bros is owned by AT&T, and AT&T views this strategy as a way to instill more loyalty to its wireless services, even at the potential cost to theater revenues.

———–

If you’re worried about the original streaming service – Netflix – don’t be. Although its growth has slowed, that’s partly because it already has close to 200m subscribers worldwide. Its stock is up over 50% YTD, and even the announcements from Disney and Warner didn’t seem to shake that. Similarly, Amazon Prime has over 150m video users, more than half of them in the U.S., and in new streaming content.

It’s a new world for Hollywood. Brooks Barnes, NYT entertainment reporter, wrote: “one Warner Bros. executive told me that “the town†felt like a dismantled movie set: The gleaming false fronts had been hauled away to reveal mere mortals wandering around in a mess.†Another Hollywood insider told him: “I see this as a time of opportunity. Sometimes you have to take it down to the studs and build something new.â€

Healthcare’s “false fronts†have been torn down too. We’ve exposed our glaring lack of public health infrastructure, our inability to generate enough PPE, our testing has been abysmal, and now our hospitals, particularly our ICUs, are overflowing. We’re used to handling expected elective surgeries and even “normal†emergencies, but were caught flat-footed by a pandemic.

If ever there was a time to take healthcare “down to the studs and build something new,†this is it.

We brag about the increases in telemedicine, but we should note the CMS rules that have expanded its use are only temporary. We haven’t addressed the inter-state licensing issues. We’re not even doing telehealth visits all that well; the Press Ganey survey concluded: “The bad news is that patients clearly feel that the process of telemedicine (logistical things like ease of scheduling and making audio/video connections) falls short.â€

We’ve seen dramatic declines not just in office visits but also in use of preventive services and screenings, elective surgeries, emergency room visits, even heart attacks. We just don’t know if these declines are good or bad. Researchers Allison H. Stokes, PhD, and Jodi B. Segal, MD, suggest in Health Affairs: “We see a unique methodological opportunity to evaluate the harms of low-value care.†Another researcher, Dr. H. Gilbert Welsh agrees, telling NYT: “We are in the midst of an unprecedented natural experiment that gives us an opportunity to determine the effect of a substantial decline in medical care utilization.â€

But will we take advantage of that opportunity, or will we just go back to our old ways once the vaccines work their magic?

E.g., will healthcare just expect patients to go back to the theater? Or will major healthcare companies bet big on the future: “streaming†(aka telehealth) as the main consumer point-of-contact, with patient convenience as a main driver? Where digital is the norm?

Disney’s physical locations – its theme parks – are hemorrhaging money, and Warner Bros has suffered dramatic declines from theater revenues, but both are betting big on their virtual strategies – and the markets are rewarding them. Warner says its announcement is only a strategy for 2021, but, as NYT put it:

It will be almost impossible to go back, and it may force other studios to abandon the old model. Fans trained to expect immediate gratification will not be eager to return to the days of giving theaters an exclusive period to play movies.

We shouldn’t expect patients to go back to the “old†healthcare system either.

I’m not expecting healthcare to have a Baby Yoda caliber idea, but it can certainly do better than its current Jar Jar Binks strategies.

Kim is a former emarketing exec at a major Blues plan, editor of the late & lamented Tincture.io, and now regular THCB contributor.

By KIM BELLARD I’ve never seen The Mandalorian.  I don’t have Disney+.  But I know who Baby Yoda is, and I’m pretty sure Disney is counting on that.  Hollywood, in case you haven’t been paying attention, is going through some radical changes.  There may be some lessons for healthcare in ...

Today’s   is going to be an End of Year special. It’ll be a big one with Michael Millenson , Deven McGraw , Jessica DaMa...
17/12/2020

Today’s is going to be an End of Year special. It’ll be a big one with Michael Millenson , Deven McGraw , Jessica DaMassa , Robin Farmanfarmaian�, Mike Magee , Rosemarie Day , & Marcus Whitney . There may be a few surprises too!

But we’ll be rounding off the year talking about the good, the bad and the very ugly of 2020. And giving our forecasts for 2021. Come join us on ThehealthcareBlog.com at 1pm PT/4pm ET — Matthew Holt

Today's is going to be an End of Year special. It'll be a big one with Michael Millenson , Deven McGraw , Jessica DaMassa , Robin Farmanfarmaian , Mike Magee , Rosemarie Day , & Marcus Whitney . There ...

Today on Health in 2 Point 00, Jess has me weigh in on Cityblock Health’s big raise of $160 million bringing their total...
16/12/2020

Today on Health in 2 Point 00, Jess has me weigh in on Cityblock Health’s big raise of $160 million bringing their total up to 300 million to improve health for low-income patients. On Episode 174, Elation, which is Cityblock’s EMR as well as that for some other independent primary care clinics, raises $40 million and working their way into a tough market. Modern Health raises $50 million for the “fourth” pillar of care, providing another mental health platform. LeanTaaS raises $130 million, providing a digital front end for hospitals and smooth out patient access, in contrast to companies like Olive working on the backend. Finally, Well gets $40 million in a Series A using AI and behavioral economics to provide health information and coaching. —Matthew Holt

Today on Health in 2 Point 00, Jess has me weigh in on Cityblock Health's big raise of $160 million bringing their total up to 300 million to improve health for low-income patients. On Episode 174, Elation, which is Cityblock's EMR as well as that for some other independent primary care clinics, rai...

By MIKE MAGEEHealth reporting this week is rightly dominated by the challenging worldwide distribution of the Pfizer vac...
16/12/2020

By MIKE MAGEE

Health reporting this week is rightly dominated by the challenging worldwide distribution of the Pfizer vaccine for Covid-19. Bringing the virus to bay is job #1, not only to preserve human life but also our global economy. But this week, on the 5th anniversary of the Paris Agreement, we are reminded that our long term human health, including clean air and water, mitigation of weather-related human disasters, and regulations that lessen our chronic burden of disease, depend as much on energy policy as they do health policy.

Nowhere is this more evident (though largely hidden from sight) than in our planet’s positioning to address global warming. The Paris Agreement, the climate accord signed by 195 nations, was abuptly dismantled by Trump four years ago. But President-elect Biden has signaled that his first order on January 20, 2021, will be to rejoin the agreement.

As Trump patronized his fossil fuel funders, and promised that “we’re going to have�clean coal and we’re going to have plenty of it,†the oil and gas industry wrote down the value of its assets $170 billion in the first 6 months of 2020.

Acknowledging as much this past week, a cabal of energy investors, with combined assets of $9 trillion, signaled a shift in their strategy with a pledge to harmonize their investments with net-zero carbon emissions by 2050.

Those investors haven’t suddenly “discovered religion.†No. They’re looking at the numbers.

Clean energy options like solar and wind, combined with the latest battery technology, are now 79% cheaper to produce than US coal production. Investors realize that 90% of the new energy capacity generated worldwide in 2020, as reported by the International Energy Agency, has come from clean energy.

Efficiency, profitability, and technology in clean energy are now aligned. The cost of solar panels has dropped 89% in just the last decade, while wind turbines are close behind with a 59% drop in the same time period. The cost of batteries have declined in tandem by 89% resulting in just a two year horizon before electric vehicles reach cost parity with the venerable fossil fuel guzzling internal-combustion engine.

But what about jobs? The news here is even better. Clean energy is currently generating three times as many jobs as fossil fuels. Solar jobs alone are outpacing overall job growth five-fold.

As Trump was fiddling, American cities and states were quietly adjusting their energy investment strategies. Much of the credit goes to former Vice-President Al Gore, whose leadership in this arena has been tireless and earned him a well-deserved share of the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize.

Al Gore will be highly visible as part of the US delegation in November, 2021, when all signators of the Paris Agreement reconvene in Glasgow, just a 1 hour and 11 minute drive north from the Trump Turnberry Golf Course. But the true celebrity at that historic gathering will be infromation technology.

Gore helped Climate Trace in 2019. As their site describes:

“In 2019, a group of nonprofits including US-based WattTime and UK-based Carbon Tracker teamed up to apply for Google.org’s AI Impact Challenge with a proposal to monitor all global power plant emissions from space. Google.org not only selected the project for a $1.7 million grant, but also sent a group of seven skilled data engineering and machine learning Fellows to work alongside WattTime and Carbon Tracker for six months to help bring the initiative to fruition.

After the announcement of the Google.org grant, the teams were surprised to immediately hear from over 50 other organizations and scientists around the world offering to help. So they began systematically investigating: Could mixing and matching innovations from various groups improve global emissions monitoring even further? Among the new collaborators was Vice President Gore, who had long suspected that improved global emissions monitoring through satellites and AI held dramatic potential to accelerate climate progress.â€

Gore sees the ability to track real-time atmospheric carbon emissions as a “game-changer.†Combined with efficiency, low cost, and jobs, Gore writes, “This precision tracking will replace the erratic, self-reported and often inaccurate data on which past climate agreements were based.â€

If you feel Al Gore is overly optimistic, consider the words of thought leader and Silicon Valley entrepreeur, Tony Seba, co-founder of RethinkX, an independent think tank that analyzes and forecasts the speed and scale of technology-driven disruption. Last month in a report titled, “Rethinking Energy 2020-2030: 100% Solar, Wind and Batteries is Just the Beginningâ€, he stated,

“The implications of this clean electricity disruption are profound. Not only can it solve some of society’s most critical challenges but it will usher in hundreds of new business models and create industries that collectively transform the global economy. When a system generates hyperabundant electricity at a marginal cost close to zero, the potential for new value creation is limitless. This isn’t a problem of overcapacity. This is a Super Power solution.â€

Mike Magee, MD is a Medical Historian and Health Economist and author of “Code Blue: Inside the Medical Industrial Complex.“

By MIKE MAGEE Health reporting this week is rightly dominated by the challenging worldwide distribution of the Pfizer vaccine for Covid-19. Bringing the virus to bay is job #1, not only to preserve human life but also our global economy. But this week, on the 5th anniversary of the Paris Agreement,....

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