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June 01, 2006 - Image 91

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 2006-06-01

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Build your dream kitchen or bath
without breaking your budget!

Group practice
is unparalleled
in the Midwest

Meet one of the faces of success

'500 OFF

DYNASTY/HOMECREST

CABINET SALE

up.40% Off

Bath Package

Custom Design & Installation
• Lifetime Labor Warranty • 100% Financing Available
• 90 Days Same as Cash • Handicap Accessible Kitchens and Baths is Our Specialty

r

FREE Amana

Microhood or
Dishwasher

on any complete kitchen or
bath installation package
(10 cabinet min)

with a complete
kitchen order

igniius I

FRASER
32950 Utica Rd.
FARMINGTON
37061 Grand River
NOVI
40400 Grand River

$1000 Rebate*

25% OFF*

PLUS NO SALES TAX

ig

la
"-. H
Y
'I'7-77:'
T Il
"- §.

SAME AS CASH

on complete
kitchen and
bath orders

II

II

II
I I
I I

I

zus I

II
II

The Style You Want
is the Style You Get At

Call for your FREE
in-home estimate
1-866-4-STYLUS
(1-866-478-9587)
www.stylusl.com

TYLUS

KITCHEN, BATH
& REMODELING

PIZZA ■ FALAFEL
SANDWICHES ■ ENTREES

ICE CREAM SPECIALTIES

SMALL

Cosmo
Sundaes
Banana Split
Smoothies
Razzle
Milkshakes

MEDIUM

$3.95
$3.95
$3.95

Toppings

Waffle Cones

15600 W. TEN MILE ROAD,
SOUTHFIELD, MICHIGAN 48075

248-557-CAFE (2233)
FAX: 248-569-5801

TEL:

SUN WED: 8:30 am - 9 pm
THURS: 8:30 am - 10 pm
FRI: 8:30 am - 4 pm
SAT: 1 Hour After Sundown - 1:00 am

-

SO,*
yea sweet teeth
aid keep wet
aff, 6Witigeh!

LARGE

$2.25
$4.95
$4.95
$4.95
$5.25
$5.25
. 50C each
add 50C

COFFEE BAR

SINGLE

DOUBLE

Espresso

S1.50

$2.00

HOUSE BLENDS

SMALL

Regular or Decaf
Ice Coffee
Tea
Flavored Coffee
Hot Chocolate
Chocolate Milk
Café One Caramel
Cappuccino
Latte
Torino Hot Chocolate
Mocha
Iced Cappuccino
Iced Latte
Frappuccino
Iced Mocha

MEDIUM

SI.25
$1.25
$1.25
S1.60
S1.75

$1.50
$1.50
$1.50
$1.85
$2.25
$2.25
$3.00
$3.00
$3.00
$3.00
$3.25
$3.00
$3.00
$3.75
$4.25

$2.25
$2.25
$2.25
$2.25
$2.75

LARGE

$1.85
$1.85
$1.85
S2.10
$2.75
$2.75
$3.75
$3.75
$3.75
$3.25
$4.00
$3.75
$3.75
$4.75
$5.25

All coffees are also available with fat-free milk

FREE!

We serve

New York-

style

pizza!

VISA

SOFT
ICE
CREAM
WITH
THIS
COUPON

Expires 6/16/06

UNDER THE STRICT SUPERVISION OF THE VAAD HARABONIM OF GREATER DETROIT/ All our menu
items are Cholov Yisroel, Bishul Yisroel, Pas Yisroel. We use only Bodek vegetables. All our lettuce
is Handwashed and Strictly Checked by an authorized mashgiach from the Vaad Harabonim of
Greater Detroit. We reserve the right to limit quantities and correct printing errors. Cafe One is not
responsible for errors in this ad. This includes, but is not limited to typographical errors or misprints.
Management reserves the right to override, add or change any rule at anytime at their discretion.

Michael Eichenhorn, M.D., is
division head of Pulmonary,
Critical Care, Allergy,
Immunology, Sleep Medicine and
Research at Henry Ford Hospital
in Detroit, and a member of the
Henry Ford Medical Group. He
talks about critical care and
pulmonary medicine.

My 31-year practice at Henry Ford
began at the University of
Michigan Medical School, when
I was one of 36 students in a
year-long pilot program at Henry
Ford Hospital in Detroit. The
cohesive medical group, where the
doctors knew each other, appealed
to me, as did the variety of patients
and illnesses.

The medical group multidisciplinary
practice is one of our strongest
suits, unparalleled anywhere in the
upper Midwest. At Henry Ford,
I can consult and immediately
collaborate with anyone in any
specialty to positively impact the
care of a patient. That opportunity
does not exist in private practice,
where a physician is not part of a
pre-formed team. This is even
more important in critical care.

With an aging population, the
volume of critical care is skyrocket-
ing, and more than 50 percent of
Medicare expenses are incurred in
the last six months of life.

However, a number of studies
indicate that when hospitalized
patients are critically ill, and cared
for by specially trained critical care
practitioners, they will have better
outcomes than those without these
experts.

Henry Ford was the first Michigan
hospital to join in the Boston-
based Institute of Healthcare
Improvement's `1oo,000 Lives'
campaign, a two-year project with
the goal of saving loo,Poo lives
by the end of 2006, through a
number of interventions that limit
infections and provide good
after-care for conditions such as
heart attacks.

It's very rewarding when I'm able
to rescue patients from circum-

For more information or to make an
appointment call 1-800-HENRYFORD or
visit our Web site www.henryford.com

stances where,
without high-
level technologi-
cal intervention
and dedicated
bedside care,
they would not
have survived.
When dealing
with acute,
overwhelming
illness, I believe
it's also impor-
tant to find the comfort zone
between appropriate, aggressive
treatment and the maintenance of
dignity for patients and families.

In most critical care situations,
breathing is impaired. Since
pulmonary physicians are the most
knowledgeable in providing
artificial ventilation, it was natural
that the fields of pulmonary and
critical care medicine would
become closely associated.
Nationally, pulmonary physicians
provide 75 percent of critical
services.

As a pulmonary specialist, another
primary concern is lung cancer.
Twenty years ago, virtually all lung
cancer patients were men, but in
the last decade we have seen their
numbers equalize with women's,
because now young women are
smoking a lot more than young
men. In 1998, lung cancer
surpassed breast cancer as the
leading cancer killer of women.
It's frequently a self-inflicted dis-
ease from cigarette smoking.

We're now more effective at early
detection and treatment of breast
cancer. But we still lack good
screening for lung cancer, which
may not be discovered until it's in
an advanced stage. However, we're
developing new methods to
recognize lung cancer at an earlier
stage and treat it.

In another important area, I pro-
vide physician coverage annually
for a project through Temple
Israel, which assists homeless peo-
ple. My wife, a former Henry Ford
nurse, and I are affiliated with the
Temple.

HEALTH SYSTEM

JNPLATINUM • JUNE 2006 •

29

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