Official Magic and Witchcraft News: Magic, Witchcraft and Religion professor dedicated to the study of the unknown

Magic, Witchcraft and Religion professor dedicated to the study of the unknown

Official Magic and Witchcraft News: Magic, Witchcraft and Religion professor dedicated to the study of the unknown

ED Selected Extract:
“I think that’s what attracts students to taking this class. It’s about religion, but it’s also about something else very fascinating, very strange [and] foreign.”

Instead of tackling magic from a fantasy viewpoint, this course focuses heavily on the anthropological understanding of both religion and witchcraft, and the symbolism that witchcraft portrays.

Kreinath said he finds the study of rituals “ immensely fascinating.” “They are doing symbolic acts, but at the same time, they kind of have an effect on the environment,” Kreinath explained. He said magic ties into ancient traditions. “What is done in a ritual? What is told in a myth? That also has something to do with indigenous traditions,” he said. Kreinath said cultures have historically classified each other’s religions as “magic.”

“That’s what you can find from the mid-19th century to the mid-20th century where magic is what the other people are doing,” he said. “We are doing religion, they are doing magic.”

Computer Selected Extract:

Anthropology professor Jens Kreinath speaks to The Sunflower during an interview on Jan. 13. Kreinath teaches the class Magic, Witchcraft, and Religion. Jens Kreinath is a man with many different skills. With backgrounds in studying philosophy, theology, religious studies, and anthropology, Kreinath loves sharing his knowledge with others. Originally […]

Ed Comment:
This would be a fun class to take.

Thanks Sunflower Wichita State!

Academia.edu is a place to share and follow research.

Dr. Jens Kreinath
Dr. Phil. in Social and Cultural Anthropology, University of Heidelberg, summa cum laude

Heidelberg University – Heidelberg University
Heidelberg University – Heidelberg University Founded in 1386, Ruperto Carola is the oldest university in today’s Germany and one of Europe’s leading research institutions. Its success across all funding rounds of the Excellence Competition and international rankings underscore its leadership role and excellent reputation in the academic, scien…

Official Magic and Witchcraft News | African Shamanism Invented Vaccination

Sopona-lg

Official Magic and Witchcraft News | African Shamanism Invented Vaccination

Vaccination as we know it comes from a West African Shamanic religious practice that worshipped Shapona, the Yoruba god of smallpox. (1)

ED Selected Article Quote:
Vaccination is a direct adoption of the ancient Original African medical practice, known in Yoruba as Soponna. Soponna, a practice popularized by the cure of smallpox, involved the minor controlled infection of a person with a disease in order to develop antibodies that can protect the person against any future major infection of the disease.

Read more at: https://www.vanguardngr.com/2020/05/covid-19-african-traditional-or-western-medicine/

Covid 19: African traditional or Western medicine?
Some people would be wrongly informed to choose one or the other, not knowing that they are actually related. While Eurocentric
ED: Conservative Americans call this Witchcraft and the vestiges of the prejudice against Pagan Magic at the Salem Witch trials still exists today. Was it Witches or idol worshipping satanists that invented vaccinations in West Africa?  It’s up to you dear reader.
shapona the Yoruba god of smallpox
This is a statue of Shapona, the West African God of Smallpox. Gift of Rafe and Ilze Henderson, 1995.014, CDCM Collection
CDC Centers for Disease Control and Prevention David J. Sencer CDC Museum This is a Actual US Federal Government Witchcraft Idol Worship statue.
ED Commentary:
The basis for modern vaccinations comes from what were considered a cult or witch doctors (shamanism) in West Africa. First written about in the 1700’s by Cotton Mather a Harvard University pastor it was called “Black African Magic” and was a part of the Salem Witch hunts and Witch trials.
Article commentary courtesy:
Notes:
Caption from CDC:
This is a statue of Shapona, the West African God of Smallpox. It is part of the historic collection of artifacts at Centers for Disease Control and Prevention David J. Sencer CDC Museum. A uniquely carved, wooden figure, it is adorned with layers of symbolic objects, including monkey skulls, cowrie shells, and hair. Donated in 1995, by Ilze and Rafe Henderson, it was created by a traditional healer, who made approximately 50-Shaponas, as commemorative objects for the CDC, World Health Organization (WHO), and other public health experts attending a 1969 conference on smallpox eradication. For a closer view of this statue, see PHIL 8004.
Additional Information from CDC:
Smallpox was thought to be a disease foisted upon humans due to Shapona’s divine displeasure, and formal worship of the God of Smallpox was highly controlled by specific priests in charge of shrines to the God. People believed that if angered, the priests themselves were capable of causing smallpox outbreaks, through their intimate relationship with Shapona. Suspecting that the priests were deliberately spreading the viral disease, the British colonial rulers banned the worship of Shapona in 1907. However, worshiping the deity continued, as the faithful paid homage to the God, even after such activities were prohibited.
US CDC logo.svgThis media comes from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention‘s Public Health Image Library (PHIL), with identification number #8003.
James Gathany (photo), CDC/ Global Health Odyssey
“This image is in the public domain and thus free of any copyright restrictions. As a matter of courtesy we request that the content provider be credited and notified in any public or private usage of this image.”

(1) This is U.S.A. witchcraft history from the 1700’s, Harvard University history, Salem Massachusetts History, Medical history and African American history. It is a combination of two articles and a image of a CDC museum collection item obviously of topical importance in 2020.

My Personal Health Record

My Medical Life Record
AKA
My EHRS, My Lucy, My CCD, My CDA and  My EHR

Stick it on your phone everybody OR carry it on a thumb drive/memory stick. It’s a XML document or pdf you can import into your iphone or store on a thumb drive there are several different kinds of documents available. I have a folder called:
My_EHRS_Health_Summary
plus another folder called:
My_EMR_Medical_Records
with appropriate sub folders:
My_Health_Tests and My_Health_Visits

Like this screen shot shows:

health record folder layout
health record folder layout

I have worked in College Textbook Publishing (Anatomy and Physiology, Microbiology and Health) all my career and it took literally two days to research and write this curated article. I know what SGML and XML is. [Ouch already there is a ouch in here, sheesh!]

I have no idea what the records are called or what to look for, so read on to see why if you dare. Here we go on the internet together:

 

Sunset From Roof
Sunset From Roof June 3 2019

This next article discusses “meaningful use” which I thought was interesting because it is the whole: Is she drunk? is it toe fungus OR a ruptured brain aneurysm conundrum.

 

Eagle Point Sunset 2016
Eagle point sunset 2016

OK so I am interested in how these things work and how I can get it into my phone so I apparently digressed for a week and now I am back at it again. What levels of record are available, what is in them?

Wrong question. (!)
Which record do I need so I don’t die if I am unconscious?
Ding ding ding!  Winner!

The correct way to ask the question is like we just did and there are three kinds of records that The United States of America’s Healthcare IT Department has discovered.

From that website with “curator comments”:

EMR

Electronic medical records (EMRs) are a digital version of the paper charts in the clinician’s office. Legitmus notes => Each office has one folder of records for you.

EHR

Electronic health records (EHRs) do all those things—and more. EHRs focus on the total health of the patient—going beyond standard clinical data collected in the provider’s office and inclusive of a broader view on a patient’s care. EHRs are designed to reach out beyond the health organization that originally collects and compiles the information. They are built to share information with other health care providers, such as laboratories and specialists, so they contain information from all the clinicians involved in the patient’s care.  Legitimus Notes => Each hospital or healthcare organization has a large folder or in my case a box for you BUT they need to have the managing physicians basic patient exchange/transfer document on top of the boxes or folders. It’s like stapling “the most important thing in the word to this patient” is this letter on the outside of the chart OR the first page in it. What the heck is that called? [Hint: It’s like a old time Doctor’s transfer the patient letter?  i.e., a Lucy/CCD/EHR]

PHR

Personal health records (PHRs) contain the same types of information as EHRs—diagnoses, medications, immunizations, family medical histories, and provider contact information—but are designed to be set up, accessed, and managed by patients.

Let’s stop here for a money moment.
Apple wants to do what?
Stick it on your phone.

What does the publisher do?
Email me the XML file please.
Thanks!

—Legitimus

Take Away Key Terms:

CCD and CCR  <= ~The same thing: Clinical Care Document is perhaps the latest acronym. Continuity of Care Record was from MA State and
ASTM https://www.astm.org/Standards/E2369.htm 

CCD The Continuity of Care Document (CCD) is a joint effort of HL7 International and ASTM.

C-CDA Consolidated Clinical Document Architecture a Corepoint term.

CDA A hl7.org term

Lucy Record <= A health record summary Epic Systems My Chart term AKA C-CDA, CCD, CCR (Pick one)

EMR Electronic Medical Record
EHR Electronic Health Record
PHR Personal Health Record

EHRS Electronic Health Record Summary [I made this up myself]

XHRS XML Electronic Health Record Summary “Xhers” Stunning,. isn’t it. All that to get to this: What you want or have is a XML Electronic Health Record Summary which in the textbook and media  publishing world of SGML would get a custom XML DTD.  Probably it would be called XHRS the XHRS DTD would have custom  style sheets probably starting with XHRS as the prefix like this: xhrs.xsl

Legitimus Notes:
Today we have XML electronic health record summaries called among other things  Lucy or CCD records that can save your life. Please make sure yours is up to date. If you are ever taken to a psychiatric facility make them look at the Lucy/CCD records from your last doctor visit before they assume you just tried to commit suicide by walking the wrong way down the street OR falling down on the Golden Gate Bridge. (It’s a Black Humor San Francisco Joke)

(!) Every CDA record type should have these things in it:
Header <–Obvious, who what where when.
Body <– A problem if it is not in sections, it can be in one big blob full of PDF files of written records, and electronic records.
Section(s) <–This should eliminate the “reading through your toe fungus problem to get to your brain cancer problem”.
Narrative Block <–What the Doctor or PA wrote about the visit or observation AND/OR the interpretation of the scientific evidence.
Entries <–the scientific evidence including machine readable records of BP/HR etc., etc.,

Way more stuff:

 

 

Block quote from
https://www.healthcareittoday.com/tag/lucy-phr/

Lucy is a PHR that is not connected to any facility’s electronic medical record system. It stays with patients wherever they receive care and allows them to organize their medical information in one place that is readily accessible. Patients can enter health data directly into Lucy, pull in MyChart data or upload standards-compliant Continuity of Care Documents from other facilities.

It’s a XML document you can load into your iphone and view in a web browser or store on a thumb drive. You can email it and it comes encrypted or unencrypted. But technically it is a CCD or CCR not a PHR.

Confused I was, now I am not, Thanks Mr. Legitimus.

Tech Support from apple:
https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT208680

How do I put medical records on my Iphone?
Add your health records
  1. Open the Health app, then tap the Health Data tab.
  2. Tap Health Records > Get Started. …
  3. Search for your hospital or network, then tap it.
  4. Under Available To Connect, choose an option.
  5. Sign in to your healthcare provider’s website or app. …
  6. Wait for your records to update.

References:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Continuity_of_Care_Document

and

Clinical Document Architecture (CDA)

Links:

What am I using?
Plus email? (because my EHRS  ~800KB and EMR  is 700 MB?)
Email the Xhrs docs to myself on my phone and done.

Metal thumb drive for medical records
Kingston usb thumb drive for medical records from Amazon: Kingston Digital DataTraveler SE9 16GB USB 2.0 (DTSE9H/16GBZET)