• Job Searching in the 21st Century

    Searching for a job isn’t as difficult as it used to be. With the Internet at your disposable 24X7, the searching process has become much easier. Now you can locate jobs that interested you and send your resume via Internet from the comforts of your living room.

  • Does Your Resume Tell Your Story?

    I have reviewed more than 100,000 resumes during my 30 plus years in sales recruiting. There have been many books and online articles produced over the past 10 years about how to write the perfect resume and it still amazes me how many poor and ineffective resumes are being produced.

  • Apply only to the jobs you are qualified for

    This seems like another no-brainer. However, since there are fewer jobs available, a sense of desperation may creep in and you might find yourself applying for jobs that are a real stretch. As a rule of thumb, if you cannot check off 75% of the requirements listed for the job (including all mandatory requirements), then you should probably pass on applying for that particular position- no matter how smart, enthusiastic or willing to learn you may be.

  • Keep your current job as long as you can

    As outrageous as it may seem, I have spoken to people who have left their jobs to undertake a full-time job search. In this economy, this is a bad choice, even if you think your present company is contemplating layoffs, working you into the ground, or you are otherwise dissatisfied. To Type A hiring managers (who seem to multi-task even in their sleep), it is incomprehensible that someone would be unable to do their job and conduct a job search at the same time. Moreover, in this economic climate, it is seen as evidence of poor decision-making.

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Medical News
Wednesday, 25 November 2009 16:45

    People who have this condition, called cubital tunnel syndrome, can feel weakness in their hands and have difficulty opening jars or playing musical instruments.She started dropping things in her left hand, and needlework became too difficult.

“It could impede your typing ability, your writing ability,” Evans said. “People get very unintelligible writing if it gets severe.”

Donna Malloy, 66, noticed the numbness in her hands when she spoke on her cell phone for hours.

“Mainly when I was holding something, I noticed, ‘Geez, they’re tingling,’ ” Malloy said about her ring and pinkie fingers. “It got progressively worse. If you walk around holding the cell phone, after a while you’re not sure you have it in the hand anymore.”

“I thought: ‘I’m turning old and falling apart,’ ” Malloy said.

Constant cell phone use could “stress out the ulnar nerves,” said Dr. Leon Benson, an orthopedic surgeon and spokesman for the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons. The ulnar nerve, which travels through the forearm and branches into the hand, can become weakened and scarred after being stretched repeatedly.

“The more you bend it, the more it stretches,” Evans said. “It diminishes the blood supply, and the blood is not flowing through the nerves.”

While the nerves are designed for stretching, “it’s not normal to be in a position to be stretched for an hour,” Benson said.

People with severe cases of cubital tunnel syndrome, like Malloy, require surgery. But most cases require simple behavioral changes. The condition is not as common as carpal tunnel syndrome, which affects nerves in the wrist.

This doesn’t mean that cell phone use is dangerous, doctors said.

“It’s like anything else, any sporting activity,” Benson said. “You can hit balls at the driving range — just don’t hit 300 of them, because you’ll be sore. So common sense would dictate not to talk on the phone for hours if your small and ring fingers go numb.”

After surgery, Malloy said her hands are “fine now. It doesn’t bother me.” She still talks on her cell phone, but she uses a Bluetooth headset.

Cubital tunnel syndrome doesn’t affect only cell phone addicts.

Elderly people who rest their elbows on the arm of a chair can develop the syndrome, as can truckers and people who use wheelchairs who lean on their elbow, Evans said. Some people who sleep curled in a fetal position with their elbows overly bent can develop the syndrome. Another factor could be occupational. People who type in front of a computer, with their elbows bent tighter than 90 degrees, could damage their nerves.

Bending the elbow tighter than 90 degrees for an extended period of time will stretch the ulnar nerve by 8 to 15 percent, Evans said. The remedies are simple.

– Avoid activities that require the elbow to be bent tighter than 90 degrees.

 

Too much cell phone use can lead to overextending nerves, causing what doctors call “cell phone elbow.”

Orthopedic specialists are reporting cases of “cell phone elbow,” in which patients damage an essential nerve in their arm by bending their elbows too tightly for too long.

When cell phone users hold the phone to their ears, they stretch a nerve that extends underneath the funny bone and controls the smallest fingers. When talkers chat for a long time in that position, it “chokes the blood supply to the nerves. It makes the nerves short-circuit. The next thing you know, there’s tingling in the ring and small finger,” said Dr. Peter J. Evans, the director of the Hand and Upper Extremity Center at the Cleveland Clinic in Cleveland, Ohio.

When that happens, the advice is simple: Switch hands — before it gets worse.

Last Updated on Saturday, 05 December 2009 16:15
 
 
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