Guillermo del Toro gets his star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Lin-Manuel Miranda honors Rita Moreno with documentary. Largest U.S. immigration raids in a decade leads to 680 arrests.
Guillermo Del Toro Makes This Week’s Top 5
Guillermo del Toro gets his star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Lin-Manuel Miranda honors Rita Moreno with documentary. Largest U.S. immigration raids in a decade leads to 680 arrests.
The following are the headlines that received the most views on our Facebook page:
1. Guillermo del Toro On Getting a Star on Hollywood Walk of Fame: “I’m Mexican, and I Am an Immigrant”
2. Lin-Manuel Miranda honors Rita Moreno's life with new PBS documentary
3. Filmmaker Guillermo del Toro Receives Walk of Fame Star
4. Largest US Immigration Raids In A Decade
5. Free Tuition Option For Foster Kids
Photo: Guillermo del Toro took home four Oscars® at The 90th Oscars® for the film “The Shape of Water,” including for Directing and Best Picture.
Photo Courtesy of Disney and ABC
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.
Other articles from Hispanic Outlook:
Graduating More Latino Doctors
In the 2003 landmark Supreme Court decision on affirmative action at the University of Michigan Justice Sandra Day O’Connor wrote, “We expect that 25 years from now, the use of racial preferences will no longer be necessary to further the interest approved today.” Since that 2003 decision, the United States has made little progress in the areas Justice O’Connor had hoped, says Jorge Girotti, director, The Hispanic Center of Excellence at the University of Illinois College of Medicine. In fact, it appears the country is moving backwards, he added. Statistics suggest that most U.S. medical schools can just attract, enroll or graduate significant numbers of Latinos. In the 2018-19 school year Latinos comprised only 6.4% of students enrolled in U.S. medical schools. Some schools, however, are the exception. The University of Illinois College of Medicine, for...
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Legal Pot Cuts Into Medical Marijuana
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — When states legalize pot for all adults, long-standing medical marijuana programs take a big hit, in some cases losing more than half their registered patients in just a few years, according to a data analysis by The Associated Press. Much of the decline comes from consumers who, ill or not, got medical cards in their states because it was the only way to buy marijuana legally and then discarded them when broader legalization arrived. But for people who truly rely on marijuana to control ailments such as nausea or cancer pain, the arrival of so-called recreational cannabis can mean fewer and more expensive options. Robin Beverett, a 47-year-old disabled Army veteran, said she resumed taking a powerful prescription mood stabilizer to control her anxiety and PTSD when the cost of her medical marijuana nearly tripled after California began general sales. Before...
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Social Media Take On Bogus Vaccine Claims
NEW YORK (AP) — Like health officials facing measles outbreaks, internet companies are trying to contain vaccine-related misinformation they have long helped spread. So far, their efforts at quarantine are falling short. The digital scrapbooking site Pinterest—which has been a leading online repository of vaccine misinformation—in 2017 took the seemingly drastic step of blocking all searches for the term “vaccines,” affecting even legitimate searches for information. It was part of the company’s enforcement of a broader policy against health misinformation. But it’s been a leaky quarantine. Recently, a search for “measles vaccine” still brought up, among other things, a post titled “Why We Said NO to the Measles Vaccine,” along with a sinister-looking illustration of a hand holding an enormous needle titled...
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Physicians Sound Health Care Alarm
Editor’s Note: Bipartisan Physicians and health care experts gathered at the Free to Care Physician Symposium in Washington, D.C., earlier this year. A white paper1 offering a roadmap drawn by a coalition of organizations made up of working Physicians and industry experts entitled, “Reducing Cost and Waste in American Medicine A Physician-Led Roadmap to Patient-Centered Medical Care,” was presented by authors C. L. Gray, M.D., founder, Physicians for Reform2 and Marion Mass, M.D. co-founder, Practicing Physicians of America3. The following is an abridged version of the white papers premise: “The cost of medical care—and access to medical care itself—now sit atop the list of worries for American households. In years past, the debate over healthcare reform centered on the autonomy of individual patients and their physicians. Who should control the personal and complex process of…
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Adding Insult To Injury
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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Physician Spotlight: Dr. Daniel Olivero, M.D.
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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