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From ‘Coco’ To Shakira; Top 5 Headlines

Global September 2019
“Coco” is being shown at a special event at The Hollywood Bowl. Shakira may be following in the footsteps of Gloria Estefan and Christina Aguilera and performing at the Super Bowl.

From ‘Coco’ To Shakira; Top 5 Headlines

“Coco” is being shown at a special event at The Hollywood Bowl.  Shakira may be following in the footsteps of Gloria Estefan and Christina Aguiler and performing at the Super Bowl.

The following are the headlines that received the most views on our Facebook page:

1. ‘Coco’ Comes To The Hollywood Bowl

2. Is Shakira Going to Headline the 2020 Super Bowl?

3. Shooting In Maine Puts Schools On Lockdown

4. University Supports Bullied Boy

5. HACU and Denny’s Hungry for Education Scholarships for 2019-20

Disney•Pixar’s “Coco” won the Golden Globe for Best Animated Film and was nominated for Best Original Song.  In 2017, the GRAMMY™ Music Education Coalition (GMEC) teamed up with Disney•Pixar’s “Coco” to bring best-in-class music from the film and learning content to teachers and youth (full story available here). Disney Photo Courtesy of grammymusiced.org

In addition to bringing our readers stories about education issues in America, we here at Hispanic Outlook feature news articles on topics both related to and outside of the field of education on our website and in our social media.

Hispanic Outlook is an education magazine in the US available both in print and digital form.  Visit https://www.hispanicoutlook.com/education-magazine for information about our latest issue, including our new supplement Physician Outlook.

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Health Simplified And Expanded

The “on-boarding” process for this locum assignment turned out to be one of the most time-consuming and disorganized processes I’ve experienced to date. I was tasked with completing online EHR training for the hospital. The “playground” I was to do this training on had a “broken link,” and no matter how many times I tried to access it, I was unable to. I was getting emails left and right about my “delinquent status,” telling me I would have to do “remediative” training in person.  Finally, after many trials and exasperated phone calls with IT, I was DONE. I had spent nearly six hours of my personal time trying to complete training for a temporary assignment that should have taken no more than an hour. I told my recruiter to sign me up for the in-person “Remediation” session with an IT specialist. I was jetlagged when drove almost two hours to the main hospital system’s IT training building where I attended a one-hour class with two other Physicians. Most of our questions could not be addressed by the trainer because it was “beyond her scope.” I was finally…

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Inspiring and Aspiring Claudia Martinez

During my first year of undergrad, I was diagnosed with Chiari Malformation (a condition where a portion of the cerebellum herniates out of the bottom of the skull, compressing the brainstem) and Syringomyelia (the development of a fluid-filled cyst (syrinx) within the spinal cord). At the time, I had no idea my life would change forever. Since then, I’ve lived in and out of the hospital, sometimes hospitalized months at a time. I’ve undergone 6 major brain surgeries, 4 feeding tube surgeries, 5 shunt surgeries, multiple procedures, diagnostic tests, and have been diagnosed with Hydrocephalus (a buildup of too much cerebrospinal fluid in the brain), Trigeminal Neuralgia (a chronic pain condition that affects the 5th cranial nerve), Adrenal Insufficiency (a condition in which the adrenal glands do not produce adequate amounts of steroid hormones) and Tethered Brainstem (where the brainstem becomes pinned to the dura, the outer covering of the brain) along the way. In February 2017, I went in for my 6th brain surgery to fix a Tethered Brainstem I developed and…

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Saluting Physicians And Volunteers

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Being Called To Serve Those In Need

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Pediatrician Honored As Everyday Hero

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Geriatric Surgery Verification Program

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Imagine having a job you love. Imagine it’s a job you spent years preparing for and took on a huge student debt just so you could fulfill your dream of having this particular career. Now imagine that each and every day you live with the stress that one false move, action or misinterpreted word could risk everything you own and your ability to continue to do what you love. That’s the occupational hazard of being a Doctor. Law enforcement professionals and firefighters face jeopardy that is obvious and acknowledged by society—and even honored.  But the Physician is often not viewed with much sympathy. For Patients who are unhappy with their medical treatment for a variety of reasons from the benign (having unreasonable expectations about the progress and extent of recovery) to the malignant (“wrong” diagnosis, medical device failure or pharmaceutical complications…

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Dr. Daniel Olivero, whose family is from Dominican Republic, grew up in a South Bronx housing project. It was a place where parents’ aspirations for their children were basic—stay alive and don’t join a gang. He has, by all measures, wildly surpassed those modest expectations.  “After undergrad, I worked for four years in a very comfortable, but very boring, office job,” Dr. Olivero explained, “I was bored and wanted an intellectual challenge, so I decided to go to med school in Dominican Republic.” It was a decision that brought him this welcomed challenge and his life’s passion. Dedicated to the health and wellness of infants and children, Dr. Olivero is a board-certified pediatrician and has served on the Board of Directors of the Lewisburg Children’s Museum as chair of health education. Dr. Olivero is dually board certified in addiction Medicine and is the...

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Doctors Weigh In On New Green Card Rule                                    

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Deny Green Cards Because Of Food Stamps?

WASHINGTON (AP) — Trump administration rules that could deny green cards to immigrants who use Medicaid, food stamps, housing vouchers or other forms of public assistance are going into effect, one of its most aggressive moves to restrict legal immigration. Federal law already requires those seeking green cards and legal status to prove they will not be a burden to the U.S., or what's called a "public charge," but the new rules, made public on Monday, detail a broader range of programs that could disqualify them. Much of President Donald Trump's effort to crack down on illegal immigration has been in the spotlight, but this rule change targets people who entered the United States legally and are seeking permanent status. It's part of a push to move the U.S. to a system that focuses on immigrants' skills instead of emphasizing the reunification of families, as it has done. U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services officers will now weigh public assistance along with other factors such as education, household income and health to…

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Tracing Opioid Sales’ Money

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