YubNub Social YubNub Social
    #thermos
    Advanced Search
  • Login
  • Register

  • Night mode
  • © 2025 YubNub Social
    About • Directory • Contact Us • Privacy Policy • Terms of Use • Android • Apple iOS • Get Our App

    Select Language

  • English
Install our *FREE* WEB APP! (PWA)
Night mode
Community
News Feed (Home) Popular Posts Events Blog Market Forum
Media
Headline News VidWatch Game Zone Top PodCasts
Explore
Explore Jobs Offers
© 2025 YubNub Social
  • English
About • Directory • Contact Us • Privacy Policy • Terms of Use • Android • Apple iOS • Get Our App

Discover posts

Posts

Users

Pages

Group

Blog

Market

Events

Games

Forum

Jobs

Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
1 y

Gates proposes using AI to stifle free speech; the UN is aiming to be in control of AI, globally
Favicon 
expose-news.com

Gates proposes using AI to stifle free speech; the UN is aiming to be in control of AI, globally

Bill Gates wants to use artificial intelligence (“AI)” for real-time censorship of vaccine-related “misinformation,” sparking a heated debate about free speech rights, mind control and the rewriting of history by the so-called […]
Like
Comment
Share
Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
1 y

All the Allegations Against Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs: Decade of Rape, Days Long ‘Freak Offs,’ Prostitution, Kidnapping, Arson, Bribery
Favicon 
www.sgtreport.com

All the Allegations Against Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs: Decade of Rape, Days Long ‘Freak Offs,’ Prostitution, Kidnapping, Arson, Bribery

by Alana Mastrangelo, Breitbart: The U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York unsealed the federal indictment against disgraced music mogul Sean “Diddy” Combs, which alleges more than a decade of abusing, threatening, and coercing women and others, racketeering conspiracy, sex trafficking, forced labor, kidnapping, arson, bribery, and obstruction of justice, among other crimes. […]
Like
Comment
Share
The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
1 y

The Hospitals That Send Patients Home With Nutritious Food
Favicon 
reasonstobecheerful.world

The Hospitals That Send Patients Home With Nutritious Food

The waiting room in the basement of Boston Medical Center looks like any other, with lines of chairs and a TV. But when patients here are called in, they don’t enter an exam room. Instead, they’re welcomed into the Preventive Food Pantry.  Over the next few minutes, staff members tailor a grocery cart to each patient’s needs. Someone with a renal condition won’t get foods high in potassium, like oranges or potatoes. If they’re diabetic, they’ll get whole-grain pasta and brown rice. And everyone leaves with vegetables, fruit and other fresh ingredients.  There’s a grain of truth to the old adage that “an apple a day keeps the doctor away”: Recognizing that nutritious food is a cornerstone of good health, the doctors at Boston Medical Center are prescribing the apples.  Latchman Hiralall, pantry manager. Courtesy of Boston Medical Center “Food is a basic item that people take for granted,” says pantry manager Latchman Hiralall. “We need to make sure that people are eating the right type of food.” The pantry opened in 2001 after doctors raised the alarm that many of their patients reported not having enough food for their families. Setting up on hospital premises, the pantry was an early pioneer in incorporating access to nutritious food directly into the medical system. And it’s proven to have great impact: The pantry was initially expected to serve 500 people a month. Today, it serves more than 6,200.  This medical center’s approach is part of a growing movement of collaboration between health providers and anti-hunger programs. With options ranging from medically tailored meal deliveries to produce prescriptions to pantries working out of health facilities, experts say these connections are having positive health impacts, improving access to high-quality foods and reducing stigma.  “It’s part of the normal care, like ‘I went to the pharmacy, I’m also going to go to the therapeutic pantry,’ or ‘I was able to get signed up for home-delivered meals that address my chronic disease,’” says Catherine D’Amato, president and CEO of the Greater Boston Food Bank, which works with the Preventive Food Pantry and other Massachusetts health institutions. “That’s where you get alignment of care.” From early childhood through adulthood, food insecurity has health repercussions. Hunger is linked to impaired brain development, asthma, and conditions like diabetes and heart disease. Researchers estimated that the health care costs associated with hunger were more than $160 billion nationwide in 2014. In Massachusetts alone, that figure was $1.9 billion.  Addressing hunger isn’t just a question of quantity of food, but also quality. Healthy produce, fresh meat and dairy products tend to be more expensive, so for families trying to stretch their dollar, those foods are harder to afford. Yet those are cornerstones of healthy diets. And while both health care and anti-hunger organizations have long understood the importance of nutrition to health, there wasn’t much collaboration. Crushed by negative news? Sign up for the Reasons to be Cheerful newsletter. [contact-form-7] “While we manage people’s illnesses,” says D’Amato, “companies have not necessarily been focused on preventing the illness.” Over the last few decades, that has started to change. Faced with high costs of treating conditions linked to food insecurity, medical systems, health insurers and government programs have become more interested in ways to support nutrition access. And Boston Medical Center was among the first. For patients who visit the Preventive Food Pantry, their introduction comes via their health care provider. Boston Medical Center screens all patients for social determinants of health, including food insecurity, explains Hiralall. And anyone who is not getting enough to eat is eligible. While a therapeutic diet isn’t a requirement for patients to access the pantry, it is common. Patients’ referrals note their health conditions so Hiralall, a registered dietetic technician, and pantry staff members can make sure clients get foods that meet their needs. “If someone is diabetic or hypertensive or has kidney failure, we need to know that,” says Hiralall. Boston Medical Center’s first rooftop farm. Courtesy of Boston Medical Center Patients can visit twice a month, leaving each time with enough food to feed their household for three or four days. One of the program’s hallmarks is its emphasis on fresh ingredients. Half the items the pantry brings in are perishable, notes Hiralall, a contrast to many food shelves that are limited by lack of refrigeration space. Some of the produce is as local as it gets, grown at a farm on the hospital’s roof. Of the 5,000 to 6,000 pounds of vegetables harvested there every year, 70 percent are distributed through the pantry. The program also collaborates with the hospital’s teaching kitchen, where dietician chefs lead classes on how to prepare healthy meals. Recently, the kitchen hosted Hispanic and Haitian families who taught recipes to hospital dieticians. The pantry helped supply ingredients for those classes, says Hiralall. “We’re learning at the same time,” he notes, “because different cultures have different ways of cooking and different types of food that they eat.” The fear of being judged for going to a food pantry can be a major barrier to accessing healthy food, Hiralall points out. But integrating the service with a medical system breaks down a lot of that stigma.  “They know that this is part of their care,” he says. “Their doctor gave them a referral to come into the food pantry.” Since the Boston Medical Center opened its pantry more than two decades ago, the idea has caught on. Hiralall has advised nearly 100 other hospital systems, including others in the Boston area.  The Greater Boston Food Bank, which provides the bulk of the Preventive Food Pantry’s stock, has been expanding its work with other health institutions. The Revere HealthCare Center of Massachusetts General Hospital opened a pantry specializing in plant-based foods in 2020. The organization Community Servings, founded in 1990, delivers meals tailored to the dietary needs of people with cancer, HIV/AIDS, diabetes and other chronic illnesses. Mobile pantries set up at health clinics around Eastern Massachusetts. The food bank has been consulting on a proposed new cancer hospital in Boston to incorporate a pantry on the first floor.  The plant-based pantry in Mass General Brigham in Revere opened in 2020. Courtesy of Mass General Brigham Dr. Lauren Fiechtner, a pediatric gastroenterologist at Mass General, often works with young children who are underweight. She routinely asks her patients’ families if they have enough to eat, and helps connect them to nutrition access programs and their local food shelves. Now, she can refer them to the plant-based pantry located in the Revere medical center. Fiechtner, who is also senior health and research advisor for the Greater Boston Food Bank, has sought to strengthen connections between the exam room and healthy food throughout her career. As a medical student, she did her residency at Boston Medical Center, where she volunteered with the Preventive Food Pantry. “It feels good as a doctor that you’re able to provide food,” says Fiechtner. “It’s right there, and they can pick it up while they’re there to see you anyways.” The connection with a health system has an impact. A GBFB survey found that among people who were screened for food insecurity in a medical setting, 87 percent followed up on recommended resources. With a food access program, doctors and patients can work together toward health goals. Courtesy of Mass General Brigham “The endorsement of the physician is always helpful,” says Fiechtner. “If you have a trusted provider that you’ve had a really good relationship with and they’re recommending something, families tend to want to do that more.” Often patients’ use of these services is tracked in their medical charts, which Fiechtner sees as useful for providers. It’s not helpful to tell a food-insecure family to buy healthier, more expensive foods. But if they’re using a food access program, doctors and patients can work together toward health goals. And patients are seeing benefits. During the Covid-19 pandemic, food insecurity and childhood obesity rates increased nationwide. But among children in households that received food from Mass General’s plant-based pantry, obesity rates declined. The percentage of kids whose BMI (body mass index)  was in the 85th percentile or above dropped from 57 percent in January 2021 to 49 percent by February 2022.  Become a sustaining member today! Join the Reasons to be Cheerful community by supporting our nonprofit publication and giving what you can. Join Boston Medical Center doesn’t track health outcomes of patients who visit the Preventive Food Pantry. Because the program provides each household with about a week’s worth of food per month, Hiralall notes, changes in health won’t necessarily correspond to pantry services. But the program does survey clients to get a sense of their experiences, and 90 percent report satisfaction, according to Hiralall. One comment stays with him as a measure of the impact: “This is like my second home.” Resources are a challenge. While Boston Medical Center has expanded the pantry’s space, many hospitals have limited space and funds for similar programs, according to Hiralall. Collaborations require commitment of staff time and resources. And the cost of food is a challenge — prices rose by five percent from 2022 to 2023. D’Amato, who has worked in anti-hunger movements for decades, sees how attitudes have shifted. Understanding within health systems is rising around how food can help people manage chronic medical conditions. And addressing hunger can be even more foundational. “If we think of food as medicine, we’re treating a problem,” says D’Amato. “Earlier on, the chronic disease isn’t there, and food can help prevent those chronic diseases.” The post The Hospitals That Send Patients Home With Nutritious Food appeared first on Reasons to be Cheerful.
Like
Comment
Share
Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 y Politics

rumbleRumble
The Five (Full episode) - Thursday, September 19
Like
Comment
Share
Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
1 y

"I was very green and it was a tentative start, but we knew we had something":The complicated birth of Led Zeppelin
Favicon 
www.loudersound.com

"I was very green and it was a tentative start, but we knew we had something":The complicated birth of Led Zeppelin

How the most creatively fertile era in the history of British Music produced the most important hard rock band of all time, Led Zeppelin
Like
Comment
Share
Homesteaders Haven
Homesteaders Haven
1 y

How To Carve The Perfect Jack-O-Lantern [Infographic]
Favicon 
homesteading.com

How To Carve The Perfect Jack-O-Lantern [Infographic]

Need some Jack-o-Lantern carving tips and inspiration for this Halloween? Well, I've got it covered with a Jack-O-Lantern infographic that showcases simple and unique jack-o-lanterns that are certain to spook! Halloween is fast approaching…. I thought it would be super cool to share some great ideas of my favorite DIY of the season: carving Jack-o-Lanterns! If you're still brainstorming about the best design for your pumpkin this year, I have few carving tips and ideas here that you can duplicate for that BOOOO-mazing Halloween… How To Carve The Perfect Jack-O-Lantern [Infographic] For centuries, people have carved faces on pumpkins to peer out from their porches and doorsteps. This practice originated from the Irish myth of Stingy Jack, a mythical character associated with All Hallow's Eve. As the legend goes, Stingy Jack deceived the devil into not claiming his soul once he died. So when he finally did, he was doomed to wander the Earth. The Devil sent Jack off into the darkness of the night, with only a burning coal to light his way. So Jack simply put the coal into a carved-out turnip, and has been wandering the Earth ever since. image via Jovan-Ukropina Deviant Art So it came to be that the Irish and the Scots started to create their own adaptations of Jack's lanterns by carving spooky faces into turnips or potatoes and putting them on doorways or windows to scare away Stingy Jack and other evil spirits. In England, huge beets are used. The practice made its way to the United States via the immigrants who brought the Jack-o-Lantern tradition with them. They soon adapted pumpkins, an American native fruit, to carve perfect Jack-o-Lanterns. Ready to carve a perfect Jack-o-Lantern? Check out the infographic below for some tips. Click here to Enlarge Jack-O-Lantern : Tips and Inspiration Tips For Getting Started 1. Prime Your Pumpkin |   Cut a circle around the stem of the pumpkin. Remove and set aside. Remove the pumpkin “guts”, keeping the seeds if you want to roast them. 2. Plan Your Design Make sure you start with a game plan. You can even find a stencil online that you can print and use as a guide. 3. Make It Last There are many ways to keep your pumpkin from rotting with household items, but you can also buy a pumpkin spray that will do the trick. No-Carve Options 1. Paint and Stickers | 2. Glow in the Dark | 3. Markers image via Home Guides 4. Glitter image via Fave Crafts There's nothing better than being greeted by your animals after a long day on the homestead ???? pic.twitter.com/rkt8cRstVO — Homesteading (@HomesteadingUSA) August 20, 2016   For The Experienced 1. Glow Sticks and Dry Ice | 2. Cat Pumpkins image via Wonderful DIY 3. Use a Drill image via Crafty Nest 4. Cookie Cutters | For the Adventurous 1. Hungry Pumpkin image via Home Crux 2. Pumpkin Skull image via imgur 3. Haunted House image via Back Inside AK 4. Pumpkin Patch | The excitement that surrounds Halloween may be overrated for some, but for many, the hunt for the perfect costume, the promise of Halloween candy, the happy laughter while trick-or-treating, and most especially that perfect Jack-O-Lantern, beautifully hand-crafted with my grandkids, is what preserves Halloween as one of the most celebrated holidays of the year.   Did you find this helpful and interesting? How will you carve your pumpkin this year? Let me know in the comments below. Want more Jack-O-Lantern ideas? Check out this post! Follow me on instagram, twitter, pinterest, and facebook!
Like
Comment
Share
History Traveler
History Traveler
1 y

Fossils reveal oldest tombstone in the US came from Belgium
Favicon 
www.thehistoryblog.com

Fossils reveal oldest tombstone in the US came from Belgium

A new study has found that the oldest known tombstone in the United States originated in Belgium, and it was tiny amoeba fossils in the stone that showed researchers the way. The black limestone slab marked the grave of a knight who died in 1627 in Jamestown, Virginia, the first permanent English settlement in America. The heavy slab of carved black limestone was originally placed in the floor of the second church in Jamestown (built in 1617). It was moved in the 1640s to the southern entrance area during a reconstruction of the church that destroyed its original location. It was rediscovered in 1901 and relocated to a new church built in 1906. The tombstone has depressions where its original brass inlays used to be. Historians think the brasses may have been removed or destroyed when the church was burned during Bacon’s Rebellion in 1676. The shapes of the depressions make it clear what the brass inlays were: a shield (probably the family crest) in the upper right, a scroll across from that and in the center a man with sword and shield standing on a rectangular pedestal that was likely engraved with the funerary inscription. That armed figure is what marked the deceased as a knight. Historians found only two knights who died in Jamestown in the 1600s, which narrowed down the identity of the tomb’s occupant to either Sir Thomas West (d. 1618), the colony’s first resident governor, or his successor as governor, Sir George Yeardley (d. 1627). There are no references in historical records to indicate the former might be the deceased. There is a strong indicator that the latter is. Sir George’s step-grandson, Adam Thorowgood II, requested in his will in the 1680s that he be given a black “marble” tombstone engraved with the crest of Sir George Yeardley and containing the same inscription found on “the broken tomb,” indicating the tombstone was already damaged in the 17th century. Fine-grained and capable of being polished to a high gloss, black limestone was the preferred material for the tombstones of the wealthy colonists of Chesapeake Bay in the 17th century. It is often called “marble” because of its polish and fine, homogeneous composition, but in this case, its not being marble was the key to identifying its provenance. The research term used fossils trapped in the limestone to trace its origin, and microfossils are usually destroyed by the heat and pressure that create marble whereas they are preserved in limestone. Researchers identified the microfossils from two fragments taken from the bottom of the tombstone. The limestone fragments less one centimeter square and half a centimeter thick where sliced into thin sections and photographed in high resolution. The images were then sent to specialists to identify the microfossils. Six species of single-celled amoeboid fossils were identified: Endothyra sp., Omphalotis minima, Omphalotis sp., Globoendothyra sp., Paraarchaediscus angulatus, and P. concavus. The results indicate the source rock came from Europe, specifically either Ireland or Belgium, and cannot have come from anywhere in North America. Fragments from two other black limestone tombstones from the graveyard outside the Jamestown Memorial Church, one from 1697, one from 1713, were also sectioned and also found to have come from Belgium. Historical evidence suggests Belgium is the likely source, as Belgium has been the most common source of the Lower Carboniferous “black” marble for centuries, from Roman times through to the present. It was particularly popular among the wealthy in England during Yeardley’s life. He and other Virginian colonists would have been very aware of the latest fashions in England and would likely try to replicate them in the colonies. The study has been published in the International Journal of Historical Archaeology and can be read in its entirety here.
Like
Comment
Share
Science Explorer
Science Explorer
1 y

Simple trick could lower city temperatures 3.6 F, London study suggests
Favicon 
www.livescience.com

Simple trick could lower city temperatures 3.6 F, London study suggests

Painting city roofs white could lower the temperature in London dramatically on the hottest days, new research suggests.
Like
Comment
Share
YubNub News
YubNub News
1 y

H.R McMaster’s New Book Explains Why Trump Fired Him
Favicon 
yubnub.news

H.R McMaster’s New Book Explains Why Trump Fired Him

Just in time for the 2024 presidential election, a new tell-all memoir has been published by a former senior Trump administration official that regurgitates the usual never-Trump criticisms of the former…
Like
Comment
Share
YubNub News
YubNub News
1 y

The Democrats’ War on America, Part Two: An Economy That Serves Nobody Except Those in Charge
Favicon 
yubnub.news

The Democrats’ War on America, Part Two: An Economy That Serves Nobody Except Those in Charge

As we outlined in Part One, here in California, we have an economy that would be the fifth largest in the world if it were to be separated as a standing nation. Home to Silicon Valley, Hollywood, world-class…
Like
Comment
Share
Showing 11403 out of 56669
  • 11399
  • 11400
  • 11401
  • 11402
  • 11403
  • 11404
  • 11405
  • 11406
  • 11407
  • 11408
  • 11409
  • 11410
  • 11411
  • 11412
  • 11413
  • 11414
  • 11415
  • 11416
  • 11417
  • 11418

Edit Offer

Add tier








Select an image
Delete your tier
Are you sure you want to delete this tier?

Reviews

In order to sell your content and posts, start by creating a few packages. Monetization

Pay By Wallet

Payment Alert

You are about to purchase the items, do you want to proceed?

Request a Refund