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ext.64
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Or send check or mone order to: Accu-Ma • is USA, Inc. • 4130 La Jolla Villa • e Drive Suite 10789 • La Jolla, CA 92037
NEW '97
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*
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• Based on closed end lease w/approved credit. 48 mo. w/12,000 mi. per yr. w/15¢ per mile over. Lessee responsible for excess wear and tear. 1st me. pymt., $400 acq. tee, 5800 cap.
cost reduction, ref. sec. dep. (pymt. rounded to next $25 increment). Lic. & title lees due at inception, plus 6% tax. To get total amount, multiply pymt. + tax x term. Lessee has option but
is not obligated to purchase at price determined at inception.
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• Harvard Health Letter:
Published monthly by the Har-
vard Medical School Health Pub-
lications Group. Subscriptions
cost $32 a year. Write to Harvard
Health Letter, 164 Longwood
Ave., Boston, MA 02115.
Assessment: Dare I criticize any-
thing from Harvard? I dare.
Overall, it's excellent, as you
might expect. The articles are sol-
id and authoritative. They do a
number of special issues each
year devoted entirely to one sub-
ject (HMOs, heart disease, etc.)
that are first-rate. In general,
though, articles tend to be over-
ly long and there's a disappoint-
ingly small amount of
information per issue. It's also
the most expensive health letter
we get.
• University of Texas Life-
time Health Letter: Published
monthly by the University of
Texas Health Science Center,
.Houston, Texas. Subscription
costs $24 a year. Write to Uni-
versity of Texas Lifetime Health
Letter, P.O.Box 420342, Palm
Coast, FL 32142-0342 or call
(713) 792-8383.
Assessment: A good, solid source
of good, solid health information.
Lots of variety in each issue, the
right balance of long and short
articles, authoritative on the lat-
est health and nutrition research,
avoids the trendy but scientifi-
cally doubtful stuff. Overall, a
good buy.
• University of California
at Berkeley Wellness Letter:
Published monthly by Health
Letter Associates. Subscriptions
cost $28 a year. Write to Uni-
versity of California at Berkeley
Wellness Letter, P.O. Box
420148, Palm Coast, FL 32142
or call (904) 445-6414.
Assessment: Generally, first-rate.
Lots of information per issue
from authoritative sources. Good
mix of short, useful items and
longer, more in-depth pieces.
• HealthNews: Published
twice monthly by the Massa-
chusetts Medical Society. Sub-
scriptions cost $29 a year. Write
HealthNews, P.O. Box 52922,
Boulder, CO 80322-2922.
Assessment: In our opinion, the
absolute best of the health
newsletters. Put together by the
same people who do the New
England Journal of Medicine, it
contains just the right mix of long
and short articles, with com-
mentary by medical specialists
on controversial topics. If we
could subscribe to only one
newsletter, this one would be ID
Therapist Brings Back
Use To Injured Hand
NINA BERNARDI SPECIAL THE JEWISH NEWS
he hand, it is said, distin-
guishes man from beast.
With an opposable thumb
and a framework of 27
bones, the hand is both graceful
and strong. Its grip can be pow-
erful enough to crush a raw Ida-
ho potato or light enough to pluck
a complicated melody from a gui-
tar.
But the hand's intricate net-
work of bone and tissue can be
reduced to nothing in seconds un-
der a punch press. Or, in Mike
Dube's case, an exploding truck
tire.
'When it first happened, I
couldn't make a fist," said Dube,
24, a truck driver from Elgin, Ill.,
displaying a swollen right hand
at the end of a forearm cast. "I
couldn't touch my (pointer) fin-
ger to my thumb."
Dube was rolling out a spare
truck tire when it suddenly ex-
ploded, fracturing his right arm
in four places.
Surgery repaired the frayed
connections. Plates and screws
were inserted to hold his bones
together. But only therapy would
help him turn unresponsive fin-
gers back into working ap-
pendages.
Since his August accident,
Dube has gone to regular thera-
py sessions at Elgin's Sherman
Health Resource Center. So far,
he has regained about one-third
of the mobility he lost in the ac-
cident, he said.
"Our goal is to get them a func-
tional hand so they can manage
daily living tasks," said Eileen
Brusso, a hand therapist there.
Hand therapy is a relatively
new branch of the occupational
therapy spectrum. It began in the
1970s out of necessity as techno-
logical advances allowed doctors
to do what was once impossible -
reattach severed fingers and
hands using microscopes.
There are only 2,200 certified
hand therapists in North Amer-
ica.
To become a hand therapist,
Brusso spent 2,000 hours work-
ing strictly with hand patients
after having worked five years as
an occupational therapist. She
also passed a certification exam
to claim the title. Hand thera-
pists are not required to obtain a
separate state license. But state
licenses are mandatory for occu-
pational and physical therapists.
She works with patients in the
corner of a gymnasium-sized re-
habilitation room, past rows of
special equipment and a hy-
drotherapy pool.O