408-854-1883 starts at $30 per hr home care

Affordable in home care | starts at $28 per hr

New York Times 8-23-2107

EDITORIAL

Mr. Trump on Afghanistan: More of the Same; No End in Sight

The president’s vague plan can’t be called a strategy. His goal, other than “victory” in a war that’s gone on for 16 years, is unclear. comment icon Comments

ROGER COHEN

Trump’s Afghan Illusions

President Donald Trump on the South Lawn of the White House on Tuesday.

The new Afghan strategy is a mess because it has no diplomatic component.comment icon Comments

THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN

From Kabul to Baghdad, My Bird’s-Eye View

An Air Force service member preparing for an antiterrorism mission in the Middle East last year.

A five-nation tour offered a close look at the war on terror and disturbing context for Trump’s plans for Afghanistan. comment icon Comments

ANNA SAUERBREY

How Germany Deals With Neo-Nazis

A sign depicting Bjöern Höecke, a leader of the Alternative for Germany party, with the slogan “Never again” after a protest against the party in Cologne in April.

And why, even after Charlottesville, America has the better approach.

OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR

Dick Gregory Was a Sledgehammer of Truth

Dick Gregory, the comedian, social critic and lifelong civil rights activist, in 2016.

Watching the legend in person made me desperate to tell jokes with his piercing honesty.comment icon Comments

OP-DOCS

Have Head Shot, Seeking Wife

Is a single photograph enough to find your soul mate? comment icon Comments

LINDY WEST

The Right Way to Brag on Instagram

Louise Linton with her husband Steven Mnuchin, center, and Canada’s Finance Minister Bill Morneau, right, in Canada this June.

Tips for the spouses of cabinet secretaries or anyone else who needs them. comment icon Comments

OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR

Barcelona Dares to Stay Open

A banner that says “We are not afraid” lies among a memorial to victims of the Aug. 17 attack on Barcelona’s Las Ramblas promenade.

In response to terrorism, Catalonia refuses to fall prey to fear or xenophobia.

ROGER COHEN

Military Valor and Presidential Vacillation

President Trump’s chief of staff, John F. Kelly, during a “Make America Great Again” rally in West Virginia, this month.

Serving a commander in chief who knows nothing of personal sacrifice.

OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR

Why Trump Loves Arizona

President Trump during a rally in Phoenix on Tuesday.

The state’s ideas and style match those of the 45th president. What better place for him to revert to his natural form?

OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR

Why Trump Is Right to Get Tough With Pakistan

United States Army soldiers in Afghanistan, near the border of Pakistan, in 2011.

The success of the president’s Afghan strategy will turn on ending Pakistani impunity for sheltering terrorists.

OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR

No Alternative for The Village Voice

A Village Voice newspaper stand on the ground in the East Village on Monday.

The end of the print edition of The Village Voice has the unmistakable feel of one more piece of Old New York slipping away.comment icon Comments

EDITORIAL

Mr. Trump Sides With Wall Street; You Lose

If the Trump administration gets its way, an Obama-era rule to protect retirement savings will not be enforced until mid-2019, at the earliest.

OPINION

Steve Mnuchin’s Wife Has a Talent for Being Tone-Deaf

Stephen Mnuchin and Louise Linton, then his fiancée, at the presidential inauguration of Donald Trump in January.

When Louise Linton is done apologizing for her latest gaffe, maybe she’ll join me for dinner at my grandmother’s in Zambia.

LETTERS

President Trump’s Speech on Afghanistan

President Donald Trump speaks during a presidential address to the nation on Monday.

Readers object to spilling more blood without a clear end in sight.

LETTERS

Seeing Unity and Enlightenment in Solar Show

Viewers cheered and howled as they took in the total eclipse in downtown Jackson, Wyo.

The eclipse brings to readers much more than a moon shadow.

LETTER

Praise for Chief Executives Who Quit Advisory Panels

Stephen A. Schwarzman, chief executive of the Blackstone Group, meeting with President Trump in April.

Readers urge them to “go beyond mere gestures” and warn of presidential reprisals.

LETTER

Single-Payer Rigidity

Two retired doctors fear that rigid support for a single-payer system could backfire.

OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR

Why I Refuse to Avoid White People

Protesters and counter-protesters argue during a demonstration last week in New Orleans, Louisiana that was held in solidarity with Charlottesville after the death of a protester.

Hearing the words “white power” is deeply painful for me as a black woman. But it’s worse for the broken people chanting them. comment icon Comments

OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR

Back to Nation-Building in Afghanistan. Good.

Members of the Afghan National Army training with United States Army soldiers in Afghanistan last year.

The president denies it, but that is what extending the American military presence means. And it’s the right policy.

PATRICK CHAPPATTE

The four features below have received nominations for the 2017 News and Documentary Emmy Awards.

OP-DOCS

‘The Voter Suppression Trail’

Find out if your vote can survive the great, flawed adventure of American democracy.

OP-DOCS

The Click Effect

Dive under the sea and listen to the language of dolphins and whales in virtual reality.

OP-DOCS

4.1 Miles

In this short documentary, nominated for an Academy award, a coast guard captain on a Greek island is charged with saving thousands of refugees. comment icon Comments

PAMELA DRUCKERMAN

‘If I Sleep for an Hour, 30 People Will Die’

A World War II hero saved the lives of rebels and refugees. Now it’s our turn.

VIETNAM ’67

Reading Vietnam

I used to think “Dispatches” was the greatest book on the war. Now I’m not so sure. comment icon Comments

LETTER

Chinese Students and ‘Obedient Autonomy’

Students in a university classroom in Beijing.

An anthropologist says the term “has little to do with people monitoring themselves or others.”

OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR

Why More Migrants Are Dying in the Sahara

Desert roads outside of Agadez, Niger, last year. Smugglers are abandoning hundreds of migrants as they try to cross the Sahara.

Niger’s E.U.-funded crackdown on smuggling is pushing desperate people to attempt more hazardous desert routes.

OPINION

By Day, the Sky Was Black. By Night, We Were Talking Af-Pak.

People view the solar eclipse throughout New York on Monday.

For a few hours, the nation was captivated by celestial splendor. But by sundown, attention shifted to more earthly matters.

OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR

A New Tune on Women’s Rights in the Arab World

An activist from the NGO Abaad, dressed as a bride and wearing bandages, is symbolically released from a cage in Beirut last week. Activists were celebrating after the Lebanese Parliament abolished a law that shielded rapists from prosecution if they married the victim.

Recent reform of rape laws in several countries is welcome, but changing cultural attitudes is harder.

OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR

Can Fearless Journalism Survive Rodrigo Duterte?

President Rodrigo Duterte of the Philippines gestures to protesters in Quezon City in July.

The Philippines’ president is forcing an independent newspaper into the hands of one of his allies.

EDITORIAL NOTEBOOK

The Game of the Name

Is it worth it for the M.T.A. to brand subway stops? The Irish Spring Street station?

VIETNAM ’67

Why Vietnam Was Unwinnable

An American paratrooper sergeant shouts orders to his squad as they charge brushline while subject to sniper fire in Vietnam on June 1, 1965.

Revisionist historians argue that America could have prevailed, but the media and politics got in the way. It’s not that easy. comment icon Comments

ON CAMPUS

My University Is Named for Robert E. Lee. What Now?

Washington and Lee University campus in Lexington, Virginia.

We need to change how we honor this former college president.

DAVID BROOKS

What Moderates Believe

Instead of ideology, moderation is a way of coping with the complexity of the world. comment icon Comments

Vietnam ’67: A Newsletter About the War

American soldiers watching helicopters landing as part of Operation Pershing in South Vietnam in 1967.

Patrick Christain/Getty Images

Examining America’s long war in Southeast Asia through the course of a single year.

Are you a US doctor with more than 10 Medicare patients?

ACO 1Calling all US doctors with at least 10 Medicare patients to join us as ACO participant.

Please join Wellness ACO LLC, a start up ACO health care provider, an organization serving Medicare patients that is seeking doctors with profit sharing.  Must have at least 10 Medicare patients. The government requires 5000 Medicare patients before they give a license.

Let us help the government cut health care costs as a team provider.

Email motherhealth@gmail.com

card motherhealth

An accountable care organization (ACO) is a healthcare organization that ties payments to quality metrics and the cost of care. ACOs in the United States are formed from a group of coordinated health-care practitioners. The ACO adopts alternative payment models (e.g., capitation). The ACO is accountable to patients and third-party payers for the quality, appropriateness and efficiency of its services. According to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), an ACO is “an organization of health care practitioners that agrees to be accountable for the quality, cost, and overall care of Medicare beneficiaries who are enrolled in the traditional fee-for-service program who are assigned to it”

Stop Trump from EXPANDING the War in Afghanistan

Stop Trump from EXPANDING the War in Afghanistan →

The War in Afghanistan has been long, costly, and deadly.

But Donald Trump just committed EVEN MORE troops to the region.

Sign your name to STOP Trump from expanding the War in Afghanistan:

SIGN YOUR NAME →

Connie, the War in Afghanistan has gone on for 16 YEARS.

It is the LONGEST war in American history.

Countless American lives have been lost, and over a $1 TRILLIONwasted.

But now Donald Trump is committed to EXPANDING the war.

New York Times
Trump announces new strategy for Afghanistan that calls for a troop increase

Connie, it’s time to END the longest war in American history. Sign your name to STOP Trump from expanding the War in Afghanistan:

SIGN YOUR NAME →

We are back to escalating the failed policies of the Bush-era.

This is a reckless and irresponsible decision.

It’s expensive, it continues to put American lives on the line, and it perpetuates the endless cycle of violence.

As Progressives, we need to send a strong message to Trump that we will NOT stand for his warmongering.

https://go.weareprogressives.org/Afghanistan-War

Thank you for taking a stand.

-Progressive Caucus

President Trump is deteriorating before our very eyes

As Trump ranted and rambled in Phoenix, his crowd slowly thinned
For 75 minutes, the president defended his response to Charlottesville, threatened a government shutdown and got a number of other things off his chest.
By Jenna Johnson  •  Read more »
The strange story of that ‘Blacks for Trump’ guy standing behind POTUS at his Phoenix rally
“Michael the Black Man,” as he calls himself, has been in a cult, called Oprah the Devil, and thinks Hillary Clinton is in the KKK.
By Katie Mettler  •   Read more »
The Plum Line • Opinion
President Trump is deteriorating before our very eyes
Here’s one way this could all end.
By Greg Sargent  •   Read more »
China demands U.S. immediately withdraw N. Korea sanctions, warns will hit ties
Beijing says it opposes unilateral sanctions — even though it is a tactic it habitually uses.
By Simon Denyer  •   Read more »
Hillary Clinton calls Donald Trump a ‘creep,’ says her ‘skin crawled’ during debate
Clinton’s new book “What Happened” includes moments from the campaign she wishes she could “go back and do over.”
By Cleve R. Wootson Jr.  •   Read more »
ADVERTISEMENT
PostEverything • Perspective
I was detained for protesting Trump. Here’s what the Secret Service asked me.
Instead of seeing a political dissenter, they saw a national security threat.
By Melissa Byrne  •   Read more »
Right Turn • Opinion
Trump in Arizona shows just how unfit he is
Let’s face it: Something is very wrong with the president.
By Jennifer Rubin  •   Read more »
Trump threatens shutdown, suggests controversial pardon at Arizona rally
The president’s divisive remarks on Charlottesville violence lead thousands to gather outside the arena.
By John Wagner  •   Read more »
How Powerball manipulated the odds to make another massive jackpot
Tweaks to the rules have led to more players spending money on tickets.
By Alex Horton  •   Read more »
Melania Trump thanks Chelsea Clinton for defending Barron Trump after website bashes his clothes
“It’s high time the media & everyone leave Barron Trump alone & let him have the private childhood he deserves,” Chelsea Clinton tweeted.
By Samantha Schmidt  •   Read more »
Also Popular in Politics
Politics • Analysis
Why Ben Carson’s appearance in Phoenix was likely a violation of federal law
Carson was introduced with his government title. He shouldn’t have been.
By Philip Bump  •  Read more »
Also Popular in Opinions
Trump’s attacks on GOP senators are self-defeating
Why is the president trying to weaken Jeff Flake and Dean Heller?
By Marc A. Thiessen  •  Read more »
Also Popular in Local
He wore Confederate dress to Charlottesville. He got two middle fingers and possible expulsion from college.
A retelling of a confrontation in Charlottesville between two middle fingers and a Confederate flag.
By Avi Selk  •  Read more »
ADVERTISEMENT
Also Popular in Sports
ESPN removes Robert Lee from calling U-Va. game in Charlottesville because of his name
“It’s a shame that this is even a topic of conversation and we regret that who calls play by play for a football game has become an issue,” ESPN said.
By Alex Horton  •  Read more »
Also Popular in National
‘Disgusting’ trove found in home of three elderly brothers accused of child sex abuse
The Seattle home of the Emery brothers was “littered from floor to ceiling” with children’s toys and clothes and sexual images of young girls.
By Samantha Schmidt  •  Read more »

5 min response via email when seeking for a caregiver for your bay area seniors

Uber respond within 5 minutes or you can cancel free of charge. Motherhealth caregivers can also respond within 5 mins from your email – motherhealth@gmail.com – requesting a caregiver for your home bound seniors in the bay area who needs care 24/7 or 8-12 hours per day from a caring caregiver.

Search this site for nursing home, caregivers, home assistance , care homes , bay area seniors, elder care and more.

Motherhealth has been serving home health care for senior services since 2004. We monitor and train our caregivers. You need to state in your email the routine and care needed by your seniors. We do free home assessment on how to care more for your seniors, senior safe your house, medication management and more.

We can also call Uber for you. We add massage, cooking and light housekeeping in our service free of charge. We can also refer you to care homes in the bay area based on your requirements.

Call now, 408-854-1883, text caregiver needed in city A by tomorrow or date….

Our home health senior care service fee is based on level of care. If there is lifting, we charge a little more. We have clients who are hospice, with Alzheimer and/or Parkinsons. Many had strokes and has diabetes. We personalize our care with the needs of the seniors. We treat seniors like family.

card motherhealth

Other health care professionals are welcome to receive notifacations with 10% profit sharing by completing this form:

← Back

Thank you for your response. ✨

New Yorker 8-22-2017

High Moral Reasoning Associated With Increased Reward System Activity

High Moral Reasoning Associated With Increased Reward System Activity

Source: University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine.

Individuals who have a high level of moral reasoning show increased activity in the brain’s frontostriatal reward system, both during periods of rest and while performing a sequential risk taking and decision making task according to a new study from researchers at the Perelman School of Medicine, the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, Shanghai International Studies University in Shanghai, China and Charité Universitätsmediz in Berlin, Germany.

The findings from the study, published this month in Scientific Reports, may help researchers to understand how brain function differs in individuals at different stages of moral reasoning and why some individuals who reach a high level of moral reasoning are more likely to engage in certain “prosocial” behaviors – such as performing community service or giving to charity – based on more advanced principles and ethical rules.

The study refers to Lawrence Kohlberg’s stages of moral development theory which proposes that individuals go through different stages of moral reasoning as their cognitive abilities mature. According to the researchers, Kohlberg’s theory implies that individuals at a lower level of moral reasoning are more prone to judge moral issues primarily based on personal interests or adherence to laws and rules, whereas individuals with higher levels of moral reasoning judge moral issues based on deeper principles and shared ideals.

The researchers’ previous work found an association between high levels of moral reasoning and gray matter volume, establishing a critical link between moral reasoning and brain structure. This more recent study sought to discover whether a link exists between moral reasoning and brain function.

In this study, the researchers aimed to investigate whether the development of morality is associated with measurable aspects of brain function. To answer this question, they tested moral reasoning in a large sample of more than 700 Wharton MBA students, and looked at the brain reward system activity in a subset of 64 students, both with and without doing a task. According to Hengyi Rao, PhD, a research assistant professor of Cognitive Neuroimaging in Neurology and Psychiatry in the Perelman School of Medicine and senior author of the study, the team observed considerable individual differences in moral development levels and brain function in this relatively homogeneous and well-educated MBA group of subjects.

“It is well established in the literature that the brain reward system is involved in moral judgment, decision making, and prosocial behavior. However, it remains unknown whether brain reward system function can be affected by stages of moral development,” Rao said. “To our knowledge, this study is the first to demonstrate the modulation effect of moral reasoning level on human brain reward system activity. Findings from our study provide new insights into the potential neural basis and underlying psychological processing mechanism of individual differences in moral development. ”

Image shows a brain scan.

The finding of increased brain reward system activity in individuals at a high level of moral reasoning suggests the importance of positive motivations towards others in moral reasoning development, rather than selfish motives. These findings also support Kohlberg’s theory that higher levels of moral reasoning tend to be promotion and other-focused (do it because it is right) rather than prevention or self-focused (do not do it because it is wrong).

“Our study documents brain function differences associated with higher and lower levels of moral reasoning. It is still unclear whether the observed brain function differences are the cause or the result of differential levels of moral reasoning,” explained Diana Robertson, PhD, a James T. Riady professor of Legal Studies and Business Ethics at the Wharton School and a co-author of the study. “However, we believe that both factors of nurture, such as education, parental socialization and life experience, and factors of nature, like biological or evolutionary basis, the innate capacities of the mind, and the genetic basis may contribute to individual differences in moral development.”

The researchers say future studies could expand on this work by assessing to what extent individual differences in moral reasoning development depend on in-born differences or learned experience, and whether education can further promote moral reasoning stage in individuals even past the age at which structural and functional brain maturation is complete.

ABOUT THIS NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH ARTICLE

Other Penn co-authors include Zhuo Fang, Wi Hoon Jung, Marc Korczykowski, Lijuan Luo, Sihua Xu, John A. Detre, and Joseph W. Kable.

Funding: Funding for the study was provided by the National Institutes of Health grants (R03DA027098, R01HL102119, R01 MH107571, R21DA032022, and P30NS045839), and a pilot grant from the Center for Functional Neuroimaging, the Zicklin Center for Business Ethics Research, the Mack Institute at the Wharton School, Carlos M. de la Cruz, Sr., the Program for Professors of Special Appointment Eastern Scholar at Shanghai Institutions of Higher Learning TP2016020, and the National Science Foundation of China grants (31070984 and 31400872).

Source: Queen Muse – University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine
Image Source: NeuroscienceNews.com image is credited to Rao et al., Scientific Reports.
Original Research: Full open access research for “Post-conventional moral reasoning is associated with increased ventral striatal activity at rest and during task” by Zhuo Fang, Wi Hoon Jung, Marc Korczykowski, Lijuan Luo, Kristin Prehn, Sihua Xu, John A. Detre, Joseph W. Kable, Diana C. Robertson & Hengyi Rao in Scientific Reports. Published online August 2 2017 doi:10.1038/s41598-017-07115-w

CITE THIS NEUROSCIENCENEWS.COM ARTICLE
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine “High Moral Reasoning Associated With Increased Reward System Activity.” NeuroscienceNews. NeuroscienceNews, 22 August 2017.
<http://neurosciencenews.com/reward-system-moral-reasoning-7344/&gt;.

Abstract

Post-conventional moral reasoning is associated with increased ventral striatal activity at rest and during task

People vary considerably in moral reasoning. According to Kohlberg’s theory, individuals who reach the highest level of post-conventional moral reasoning judge moral issues based on deeper principles and shared ideals rather than self-interest or adherence to laws and rules. Recent research has suggested the involvement of the brain’s frontostriatal reward system in moral judgments and prosocial behaviors. However, it remains unknown whether moral reasoning level is associated with differences in reward system function. Here, we combined arterial spin labeling perfusion and blood oxygen level-dependent functional magnetic resonance imaging and measured frontostriatal reward system activity both at rest and during a sequential risky decision making task in a sample of 64 participants at different levels of moral reasoning. Compared to individuals at the pre-conventional and conventional level of moral reasoning, post-conventional individuals showed increased resting cerebral blood flow in the ventral striatum and ventromedial prefrontal cortex. Cerebral blood flow in these brain regions correlated with the degree of post-conventional thinking across groups. Post-conventional individuals also showed greater task-induced activation in the ventral striatum during risky decision making. These findings suggest that high-level post-conventional moral reasoning is associated with increased activity in the brain’s frontostriatal system, regardless of task-dependent or task-independent states.

“Post-conventional moral reasoning is associated with increased ventral striatal activity at rest and during task” by Zhuo Fang, Wi Hoon Jung, Marc Korczykowski, Lijuan Luo, Kristin Prehn, Sihua Xu, John A. Detre, Joseph W. Kable, Diana C. Robertson & Hengyi Rao in Scientific Reports. Published online August 2 2017 doi:10.1038/s41598-017-07115-w

Combating Older Adult Malnutrition: Tools and Best Practices for Community-Based Organizations webinar

Combating Older Adult Malnutrition: Tools and Best Practices for Community-Based Organizations webinar

Webinar takes place Tuesday, August 29

 The number of older adults facing malnutrition is increasing, with one in two older adults currently at risk.

This webinar, Combatting Older Adult Malnutrition: Tools and Best Practices for Community-Based Organizations, will highlight the impact of malnutrition on health care costs, health outcomes, and overall quality of life.

Through this webinar, participants will learn about:

  • Resources to help community-based organizations, older adults, and caregivers identify and address malnutrition (Community Malnutrition Resource Hub)
  • Creating partnerships between community-based and health care organizations to discuss malnutrition

This webinar takes place Tuesday, August 29, at 2 p.m. ETClick here to register.

Webinar presenters:

  • Mary Beth Arensberg, Abbott Nutrition
  • Meredith Ponder, Defeat Malnutrition Today
  • Judy Simon, Maryland Department on Aging
  • Mary Walsh, National Council on Aging
  • Binod Suwal (host)

Learn more about the National Council on Aging (NCOA).


Connie’s comments: Bring a soup to your neighbor who is a senior and lives alone. It will be much appreciated.  I go to the farmer’s market before closing time and they give me a discount and I make soup for seniors in the bay area.

card motherhealth