From Dollar Amount To The Intangibles, M.D. Says Condition Is A Ubiquitous Factor In Life

Sometimes celebrities or otherwise physically fit people will put on a fat suit and document their experience with a video camera, usually to be aired on a daytime talk show. The overall impression is universal: Being severely overweight is taxing on almost every level, says Dr. Eleazar Kadile, who specializes in treating patients with obesity and associated chronic disease.

"Physically, emotionally, mentally and even spiritually, being obese is an ever-present condition to the experience my clients face every day," says Dr. Kadile, director of the Center for Integrative Medicine and author of "Stop Dying Fat" (www.kppmd.com).

"Obesity is a vicious cycle that usually starts with bad eating habits during childhood. Childhood obesity has quadrupled in recent decades. I don't think enough of us appreciate how established bad habits are before most obese people reach adulthood."

Overweight or obese people often eat for comfort when they're depressed or as a reward when things are going well, "much like an alcoholic," says Dr. Kadile.

Like substance abusers, obese people pay a significant price.

•  Bigger is costlier. Many are emotional eaters, and when you eat for emotional satisfaction rather than physical satiation, you eat more, which increases the dollars spent. Obese people often have to buy clothes specially tailored for their size, which adds costs. The biggest cost, however, is healthcare due to bad health. Obesity has severely taxed our country's healthcare costs.

•  What's your self-esteem worth? Being a large individual often proves challenging in public, as daytime talk shows sometimes attest. Obesity can keep you from social engagements and make you feel self-conscious while out and about. This can lead to depression and lack of activity, fueling the vicious cycle of the obese lifestyle.

•  Time - arguably the most important metric. What do we really have in life? Money, work, love, relationships and material goods - these are all good and necessary things. But they are all for not if your health does not permit you to live long enough to enjoy them.

•  Opportunities, quality of life and happiness are compromised. You can be the most qualified professional at work, but obesity can cost you a raise. You may be a funny, intelligent and attractive person, but being too big might keep you from finding love. Simply having 100 or 200 pounds of extra fat is a burden obese people cannot escape throughout their waking existence.

"As a society, we should be more compassionate toward obese individuals - they have it hard enough without our critical judgment," Dr. Kadile says. "If you are obese, you owe it to yourself and your loved ones to save on the associated tangible and intangible costs. If you don't take action today, it can cost you many days from your future that you'd otherwise have."

About Eleazar Kadile, M.D.

Dr. Eleazar Kadile is a complementary physician who specializes in treating patients with obesity, who may suffer from heart disease, hypertension, type-2 diabetes, arthritis, depression or ADHD. With decades of medical experience throughout the United States, he has been developing a comprehensive and systematic approach to battling obesity. He is the director of the Center for Integrative Medicine in Green Bay, Wis. (www.kppmd.com).

Rock Island, IL: A financial literacy night Thursday, April 23 for Boy and Girl Scouts in grades 6 and up has been cancelled due to lack of registration. The event was scheduled at Genesis East Medical Center auditorium.

Registration is still available for a Tuesday night financial literacy fair program for children in Grades 2 to 5. The event, to be held Tuesday, April 21 from 5:30 to 7:30 pm at the Rock Island Main Library, 401 19th Street, will deliver interactive, hands-on lesssons in such basic financial literacy topics as identifying coins and bills, counting money and making change, distinguishing between needs and wants, and how banks and credit unions work. The Main Library is located at 401 19th Street, Rock island. Volunteers from American Bank and Trust, The Family Credit Union, DuTrac Community Credit Union and Midwest One Bank are participating.

The free event is open to any child in grades 2 to 5. Parents may call the Rock Island Library Children's Department at 309-732-7360.

Boy Scout troop leaders and parents should register through the Boy Scout office with Mia Carr at 563-388-7233, or mia.carr@scouting.org. Girl Scout troop leaders and parents may register with Ashley Arnold at Girl Scouts: 309-788-0833, or AshleyA@girlscoutstoday.org.

Money Smart Week is an annual program of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, www.moneysmartweek.org.

For more information about Rock Island Library services and programs, visit the library's online branch at www.rockislandlibrary.org, call 309-732-READ (7323) or follow the library on Facebook or Twitter.

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Congratulations to Rivermont  juniors Christian Elliott and Alexander Skillin who have met the high PSAT score requirements to enter the 2016 National Merit Scholarship Program. Based on the October 2014 Preliminary SAT/NSMQT Test taken by about 1.5 million juniors, these two Rivermont students are among the 50,000 highest scoring test takers recognized as National Merit Scholarship participants. In the fall of 2015 about 16,000 students will be named Semifinalists from this pool of high scoring students and will proceed to the Finalist competition.

Best of luck to both of you in the next round, Alex and Christian!

Located in Bettendorf, Iowa, Rivermont Collegiate is the Quad Cities' only Private College Prep School for PreSchool through 12th Grade.

Visit www.rivermontcollegiate.org or call 563-359-1366.

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Listening tour stops scheduled Benton, Rock Valley, and Southeast Polk Community School Districts

(DES MOINES) - Gov. Terry Branstad and Lt. Gov. Kim Reynolds will visit three Iowa school districts this month to learn more about how the first year of Iowa's new Teacher Leadership and Compensation System has gone, starting with the Benton Community School District today.

Iowa's Teacher Leadership and Compensation System is the centerpiece of Iowa's landmark 2013 education reform package. It is being phased in over three years, with a price tag of $150 million annually when fully in place in 2016-17. Iowans agreed to make this investment because it's critical to restore our schools to best in the nation and give students a globally competitive education.

Better utilizing the expertise of many of Iowa's top teachers in new roles will help schools improve instruction and raise achievement. Those new roles include instructional coaches, mentors and model teachers. With higher expectations for all students, teacher leaders support the more demanding work teachers must do by analyzing data, fine tuning lessons and co-teaching.

Benton is among the first 39 school districts, with about a third of enrollment statewide, to adopt teacher leadership systems this school year. Another 76 school districts, with about a third of students statewide, will adopt teacher leadership systems in 2015-16. The goal is for all remaining districts to have their teacher leadership systems in place in 2016-17.

"We are confident that this unprecedented collaboration by teacher leaders, teachers and school administrators will transform education across Iowa," said Branstad. "Broad, bipartisan agreement in the Legislature allowed us to create the most extensive teacher leadership system in the nation."

"One of the biggest selling points for new Iowa's Teacher Leadership and Compensation System is that it will do more to attract and retain highly effective teachers," said Reynolds. "It is changing the culture of schools with more opportunities for ongoing professional development right in the classroom."

In addition to Benton, the governor and lt. governor will visit the Rock Valley and Southeast Polk Community School Districts.

The following teacher leadership listening tour stops are open to the media:

Wednesday, April 15, 2015 

11 a.m. Benton County Teacher Leadership Presentation

Atkins Elementary Center - Teacher Leadership Center

217 Fourth Ave.

Atkins, IA

 

Wednesday, April 22, 2014

12:30 p.m. Sioux County Teacher Leadership Presentation

Rock Valley Community School District Library

1712 20th Ave.

Rock Valley, IA

Note: A tour of Rocket Manufacturing will follow

 

 

Monday, April 27, 2015

7:30 a.m. Polk County Teacher Leadership Presentation

Southeast Polk Junior High School Orchestra Room

8325 Northeast University Ave.

Pleasant Hill, IA

 

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Quad Cities pitchers overcome seven walks by holding Clinton to four hits in third straight home victory

DAVENPORT, Iowa (April 14, 2015) - Quad Cities River Bandits center fielder Derek Fisher homered for a second straight game, and right-hander Kevin Comer pitched five innings for his second win in as many appearances, while left-hander Albert Minnis struck out five batters in two innings for his first career save to finish the home team's sweep of the Clinton LumberKings with a 5-3 win in front of 997 at Modern Woodmen Park Tuesday night.

Quad Cities (5-1) completed its first series sweep since last July 26-28 in Bowling Green, and its first home series sweep since last July 19-21 against Lake County. Quad Cities last swept a series from Clinton (2-4) in five games at Modern Woodmen Park June 29-July 3, 2013.

Following four hitless relief innings in the season opener in Peoria Thursday, Comer (2-0) retired the first eight LumberKings he faced Tuesday night. He worked around a two-out walk in the third inning and back-to-back two-out fielding errors by shortstop Kristian Trompiz in the fourth inning to keep Clinton hitless through the first four innings.

Clinton right-hander Jeffeson Medina (0-1) until River Bandits first baseman Jamie Ritchie drew a third-inning, two-out walk in front of Fisher, who hammered a 3-1 offering from Medina over the Built Ford Tough Deck in right field for his second Midwest League home run, matching his total from his first professional season in 2014. In the fourth inning, River Bandits second baseman Mott Hyde hit a leadoff double to right-center field, advanced on a groundout by left fielder Sean McMullen and scored on Trompiz's two-out single into center field for a 3-0 lead. Medina was charged with three runs - all earned - on five hits with four walks and three strikeouts in 4 2/3 innings.

Comer started the fifth inning with a 3-0 lead, but after eight hitless innings to start the season, he yielded a leadoff single up the middle by LumberKings first baseman Kristian Brito. After a fielder's choice allowing third baseman Martin Peguero to reach first base, center fielder Arby Fields drew a walk, and a wild pitch moved both runners into scoring position. Designated hitter Chantz Mack walked to load the bases before Comer struck out shortstop Nelson Ward. With two outs and the bases loaded, left fielder Alex Jackson singled to right field to drive in two runs and put the potential tying and go-ahead runs in scoring position on the throw to the outfield. Comer escaped the inning by getting right fielder Estarlyn Morales to ground out to shortstop and preserve the 3-2 lead. In a five-inning start, Comer allowed two earned runs on two hits and three walks and four strikeouts. He also beat Clinton at Modern Woodmen Park in his final start of 2014.

Following Comer, right-hander Jose Montero began the sixth inning by walking catcher Wayne Taylor before striking out second baseman Gianfranco Wawoe and Brito. Taylor attempted a two-out steal but was thrown out by River Bandits catcher Jacob Nottingham.

Quad Cities added insurance runs in the seventh inning, when Ritchie and Fisher hit consecutive singles against left-hander Jarrett Brown. Fisher's hit sent Ritchie to third base, where a wild throw from left field by Jackson allowed Ritchie to score and Fisher to reach third. A wild pitch by right-hander Kody Kerski scored Fisher for a 5-2 lead.

In the eighth inning, Montero allowed a leadoff walk to Jackson and single by Morales to bring the tying run to bat. Minnis entered to strike out Taylor before Wawoe's single loaded the bases. Minnis struck out Brito, walked Peguero to force in a run, and struck out Fields - who had walked in each of his first three plate appearances - to end the inning with a 5-3 lead. Two more strikeouts in a perfect ninth inning finished the 5-3 win. All three River Bandits saves this season have been the first in the careers of Montero (Friday's win), right-hander Joshua James (Monday) and Minnis (Tuesday).

The River Bandits seek their best seven-game start since 2010 when they visit Beloit for the first of three games at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday. River Bandits left-hander Chris Lee (0-0) is scheduled to face Snappers right-hander Brett Graves (0-0).

UP NEXT: Registration is open for the Sunday, April 19, Frozen Princess Day private meet-and-greet with the Ice Queen and Snow Princess at Modern Woodmen Park. The special package includes Frozen-themed food, drinks, desserts, goodie bags and games in the Budweiser Champions Club, and a reserved box seat for the 1:15 p.m. game. Call 563-324-3000 for details. Individual tickets are on sale at the River Bandits box office and online at riverbandits.com. Ticket plans of 12 to 70 games - which include free parking, reserved seats, merchandise discounts, and guaranteed giveaways - are available by calling 563-324-3000.

ABOUT THE BANDITS: The River Bandits ownership in 2014 made one of the biggest improvements to Modern Woodmen Park since the ballpark was first built back in 1931! A new Ferris wheel, standing 105 feet over the playing field, opened May 24, Space Camp opened June 20; the new Drop'N Twist debuted in July; and the newly expanded 300-foot long zip line also reopened.

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SPRINGFIELD - Governor Bruce Rauner has issued amended writs of election to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of former U.S. Representative Aaron Schock.

The date for the Special Primary Election is July 7th, and the date for the Special General Election is September 10th. The writs have been modified from their original filing after a federal judge approved a consent decree to comply with the federal Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act.

As prescribed by Illinois law, the first day for candidates of established political parties to file original nomination papers with the State Board of Elections will be Wednesday, April 15, 2015. The last day to file nomination papers will be Monday, April 20, 2015. Those dates are not modified by the consent decree.

Additional Background

For years, the Illinois Election Code has prescribed a timeline for conducting special elections for U.S. Representative that is not compliant with federal law. The Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act (UOCAVA) is intended to protect the voting rights of citizens residing abroad, including in particular military men and women stationed overseas. Illinois law, however, does not provide sufficient time for ballots to be mailed abroad.

For that reason, the State of Illinois entered into a consent decree with the U.S. Department of Justice in 2013 to bring the State temporarily into compliance with UOCAVA for the last special election for U.S. Representative. Governor Rauner, Attorney General Madigan, and the Illinois State Board of Elections are now working cooperatively with the Department of Justice to enter into a similar consent decree for the special election caused by former Rep. Schock's resignation.

This problem has persisted without a permanent solution for too long. Governor Rauner is working with the General Assembly leadership to pass legislation to protect the voting rights of our military men and women serving overseas, while still providing that any vacancy is filled as expeditiously as possible to ensure full representation in Congress for the people of Illinois.

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According to Study, 12.9% of Residents in Eastern IA/Western IL Struggle with Hunger

 

DAVENPORT, IOWA- River Bend Foodbank announced the release of the annual Map the Meal Gap study, which details the startling rate of food insecurity experienced by community members in their 22-county service area. Map the Meal Gap 2015 results reveal that food insecurity disproportionately affects the most vulnerable populations, including over 49,000 children.

Food insecurity is the U.S. Department of Agriculture's measure of lack of access at times to enough food for an active, healthy life for all household members.

"At River Bend Foodbank, we are constantly working to increase our capacity to close the Meal Gap," said Michael Miller, Executive Director. "While we were very pleased to increase our distribution to over 7.3 million meals in 2014, food insecurity rates have increased by an even greater amount."

Nationally, 15.8% of the population is food insecure, with 21.4% of children being food insecure. Furthermore, 43% of those who are food insecure are above the income threshold for food stamps, now called SNAP.

Other key findings local to River Bend's 22 counties:

·         49,710 children are food insecure, increasing from 20.6% to 21.5%.

·         131,900 people overall are food insecure, increasing from 12.4% to 12.9%.

·         The total number of meals missed increased from 22,196,800 to 23,346,200.

Map the Meal Gap 2015 is based on an analysis of statistics collected by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, U.S. Census Bureau, and the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics in 2013, the most recent year for which data is available. The study, commissioned by Feeding America, is a detailed analysis of the nation's food insecurity. An interactive map is available that allows viewers to explore the issue of hunger in Iowa/Illinois and across the country. The map along with an Executive Summary of the study can be found at riverbendfoodbank.org/hunger.htm and then click on "Map the Meal Gap."

"Map the Meal Gap 2015 provides unique insight into the prevalence of food insecurity in each county and congressional district in our nation," said Bob Aiken, CEO of Feeding America. "It will help policy makers and our elected officials understand the challenges they face in addressing hunger in the communities they serve."

The study is supported by the Founding Sponsor Howard G. Buffett Foundation as well as the ConAgra Foods Foundation and Nielsen. The food price data and analysis were provided by Nielsen (NYSE: NLSN), a global provider of information and insights. The lead researcher is Dr. Craig Gundersen, Professor of Agricultural and Consumer Economics at the University of Illinois, Executive Director of the National Soybean Research Laboratory, and member of Feeding America's Technical Advisory Group.

County and congressional district food-insecurity details and the full report are available at map.feedingamerica.org/ .

 

River Bend Foodbank is the largest hunger relief organization in the Quad Cities and surrounding communities, distributing more than 8.8 million lbs. of food annually to more than 300 charitable feeding programs throughout a 22-county service area in Eastern Iowa and Western Illinois. Hunger programs include the Backpack Program which provides over 2000 children with nourishing food to take home on weekends during the school year, the Kids Café Program providing evening meals to children at three sites, Mobile Food Pantries which directly feed thousands of families each month, and School Pantries which serve needy children and their families.

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Best-Selling 'E-Myth' Author Michael E. Gerber Is Determined To Shock People Out Of Their Stupor

Michael E. Gerber is miffed and he doesn't care who knows it.

The best-selling author of the "E-Myth" book series says the American Dream has been waylaid - no different than if it had been besieged by robbers in a dark alley - and Gerber is intent on rescuing it.

The way Gerber sees it, the issue is our confusion about the American Dream and what every one of us believe to be true about it. And it's time to get it back on track, says the fiery 78-year-old small-business guru who vaulted to fame in 1986 with his original "E-Myth" book and has been engaged in realizing a dream of his own over the past 40 years.

"Somehow we've forgotten our roots and why there was an American Dream to begin with," Gerber says. "We've lost track of the reason why millions upon millions of people came here to try to make a better future for themselves. We've also forgotten that the dream never was a political one, but a personal one for each and every one of us.  It's the politicizing of it that's created all the trouble."

Gerber (www.michaelegerbercompanies.com) has a great deal of experience in how to restore faith in the American dream. He has worked with tens of thousands of small business owners over the past 40 years.

The trick, Gerber says, is giving small business owners and aspiring small business owners a splash of cold water to wake them up to see that the American Dream isn't dead, nor is their business. Instead, what they are missing is a lack of commitment to their own dream.

To bring his point home, Gerber began a nationwide campaign this year in Riverside, Calif., where the city's mayor, Rusty Bailey, helped launch Gerber's first city-sponsored Dreaming Room.

Gerber invented the Dreaming Room, which he describes as an "entrepreneurial incubator," in 2005, and has been delivering it to individuals worldwide ever since. It's a program where the unemployed, underemployed, self-employed or small business owners who find themselves stuck in their current unworkable circumstances join together, led by a facilitator.

In an intense, small-group setting they go through a step-by-step process where they create, collaborate and test ideas to develop or improve their current circumstances by inventing a new business.

Once developed, the concept for that new business is then put to work, with Gerber's team helping the new entrepreneur apply Gerber's entrepreneurial principles to design, build, launch and grow their new company.

Riverside was just a first step in Gerber's vision for city-sponsored economic development initiatives in cities and counties throughout the nation and the world. Having launched Riverside, it's on to Fresno and the 14 counties surrounding that California city of 509,000 people. In May, Gerber plans a Dreaming Room for the 96 mayors of all the cities in those counties "to awaken the spirit of entrepreneurship in them."

"We will be teaching people how to make it on their own in Fresno, San Mateo, and every U.S. city who invites us in, you name it," Gerber says. "In the process of inspiring and leading them and mentoring them, something remarkable will happen. Each and every individual will understand, many for the very first time, that he or she and no one else is responsible for their circumstances."

Even as he makes more Dreaming Room plans, the prolific Gerber is still pounding out books, with three he's working on simultaneously. They are "Beyond the E-Myth," "The 5 Essential Skills of Extraordinary People" and "Making It on Your Own in America."

The latter title has become an overriding theme for him of late. For Gerber, economic development is all about the individual and how personal responsibility is the key to making it in America.

"It happens with the individual or it doesn't happen at all," he says. "Every single individual is accountable for their own economy - an 'economy of one'".

"Our economic problem has been created through the belief that big government can solve our problems. We then created a monster of a government that presumes to think for us. That's why our economy is in tatters. It's why the number of people on food stamps has grown exponentially. It's why the number of people who are impoverished has grown, and the number of unemployed has grown exponentially. It's also why our federal debts and deficits have grown beyond the pale."

"The way forward is to go back", Gerber says. "Back to those inspirational days when the nation took its first awkward steps, the Constitution was written and the Bill of Rights was tacked on like a brilliant afterthought".

"If it becomes a political discussion, it misses the point," Gerber says. "It was never political back then, it was existential. It was an existential reality to liberate each of us to follow our own path."

About Michael E. Gerber

Michael E. Gerber (www.michaelegerbercompanies.com) is an entrepreneur, thought leader, speaker and best-selling author whose modern classic, "The E-Myth: Why Most Businesses Don't Work and What to Do About It," has sold more than 3 million copies. He is the founder of The Dreaming Room™, where entrepreneurs and others are provided the tools and facilitation to see, experience, develop and design their Dream, Vision, Purpose and Mission. His next book, "Beyond The E-Myth" is a passionate response to America's current inspiration deficit.

(DES MOINES) - Gov. Terry E. Branstad today signed the following three bills into law:

House File 488: An Act relating to the programs of the Iowa commission on volunteer service by establishing an Iowa reading corps and specifying uses of funds.

Senate File 267: An Act relating to privileged communications between certain peer support group counselors and officers.

Senate File 426: An Act relating to privileged communications between health care provider or health facility and a patient following an adverse health care incident.

A photo of the governor signing House File 488 today can be downloaded here. The photo can be attributed to the Governor's Office.

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Featuring performers in grades K-4

The Young Footliters will present Carlo Collodi's Pinocchio, as adapted by Kathryn Schultz Miller, this Friday April 17 at 7:00 PM and Saturday April 18 at 2:00 PM at the Coralville Center for the Performing Arts.  The production features performers in grades K-4 and is directed by Jean Grewe. Tickets are $5-$7 and are available online at www.coralvillearts.org, by phone at 319.248.9370, and in person at the CCPA box office (1301 5th Street) and Coralville Recreation Center (1506 8th Street).

According to director Jean Grewe, "It has been a total joy and blessing working on this show!  The kids are acting, building the sets, and working as running crew; they have really been involved in every part of the show, and are having a great time doing it!  And the parents have really stepped up as well - costumes, props, set, working backstage, helping in the Green Room, you name it, they did it!"

Performing in Pinocchio creates a special, age-appropriate experience for young performers.  The children receive valuable experience in putting on a production: they learn about the rehearsal process, what a performance is like, how to project and speak clearly, how to pay attention and focus on the show, and how to work as a team.  They also have a lot of fun creating a show with other kids.

Young Footliters is a program of the Coralville Center for the Performing Arts offering children and teens fun, creative, and educational theater arts opportunities in a safe, positive, and professional environment.  Young Footliters aims to produce quality productions and classes that promote responsibility, confidence, leadership, cooperation, and arts appreciation.

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