How Color Feels in the Home

April 22nd, 2008 by kanzxian

It helps to choose the colors you plan to live with in your home with awareness of how different colors affect your emotional and physical states. Every color has a unique vibration all of its own, and this can significantly affect how you feel in a room.

Simple Solution:

Using this simple chart, you can choose a room’s color to be in balance and harmony with the role you want a room to have in your and your family’s life.

Red: A room that is painted red will energize, inspire activity and movement, help passion, and be powerful and stimulating. A red room can also be exhausting and overpowering, and stressful for those who are anxious. Pink is less demanding. Choosing a red bedroom would not be restful, although some red can be used to enhance sensuality. A red exercise room would be energizing! In Feng Shui, red means luck.

Orange: Orange rooms encourage happy, joyful, social gatherings. While an orange dining room or family room can stimulate the appetite, it is a great choice for such gathering places. Orange enhances parties, communication, positive feelings, and general good cheer.

Yellow: Yellow rooms inspire intellectual clarity, organization, clear-headed articulate thinking, and happy energy. Yellow is considered a color for the logical left side of the brain. Yellow is also very bright and somewhat energizing, so one needs to choose its placement with care. A yellow office might be intellectually beneficial, but not allow restful downtime, for example, so one might want to choose to include yellow accents instead of painting each wall yellow.

Green: Green rooms are very restful but combine with an energizing quality. Green is the color of outdoors, calm and active at the same time. Green brings balance and harmony to a room, and can be used as a calming place for people who are troubled or in need of refreshment.

Blue: Blue rooms are often chosen for bedrooms and meditation rooms because its cool energy is very calming, restful, peaceful, and spiritual. Blue helps inspire a quiet meditative quality, and color therapy with blue has been found to reduce blood pressure. Blue is also useful to make one to sleep.

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China to pilot medical reform plan

January 15th, 2008 by kanzxian

China’s long-awaited medical reform plan is to be piloted this year “in selected regions,” embarking on a path of medical and health development “with Chinese characteristics”, Health Ministers said at a national health conference that concluded Tuesday.

“The major task this year is to pilot key issues listed in the newly-outlined medical reform plan in some selected regions to accumulate experiences before a nationwide implementation,” Chen said.

He did not explain how the regions would be selected and failed to give the number of regions that would fall under the pilot scheme.

Chen outlined China’s new medical reform plan, which aims to provide universal basic services at reasonable prices, in a report to the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress (NPC), China’s top legislature, in late December last year.

“Relevant guiding opinions and coordinated documents on the reform plan have taken shape,” Chen said, noting that the government will soon solicit opinions on the reform plan from the public.

Vice Minister of Health Gao Qiang said at the conference that the country’s medical and health development will “follow a path with Chinese characteristics”, the first time the government has put forward this notion.

“Imitating foreign models blindly in medical reforms will only lead to mistakes,” Gao said.

The scheme features basic concepts including adhering to the orientation of serving the people, ensuring the “non-profit” nature of public medical institutions, cutting hospitals’ involvement in drug sales, increasing governmental responsibility and input, and establishing a basic medicare network for the whole population, according to Gao.

“The aim is to provide safe, effective, convenient and low-cost public health and basic medicare service to both rural and urban citizens,” Gao said.

The new plan failed to impress some officials present.

Liao Xinbo, vice director of the health department in Guangdong, said the new plan was “not very exciting” and was still not feasible.

Liao, who had participated in the discussions on the plan, said not much new content was added into the plan.

He said some ideas had already been implemented or put on trial by some medical institutions but some ideas that failed have still continued to receive support.

But the local official admitted increasing government responsibility and input was the most exciting part of the scheme, though coordinated and detailed plans are needed to make it feasible.

The scheme also promises to “gradually reduce hospitals’ involvement with drug sales to cut drug prices,” noting that any resulting shortfall could be met by government subsidies and “a reasonable rise in medical service fees”.

Many citizens voiced their concerns over this “reasonable” rise, fearing the price increase will only serve to offset the drop in drug prices and impose an equal burden on the public.

A netizen named Tiandadida said in forum on Sina.com.cn: “I’m afraid drug prices may not be cut but medical service fees will surely shoot up.”

Growing public criticism of soaring medical fees, lack of access, poor doctor-patient relations and the low coverage of the medicare system compelled China to launch a new round of medical reform.

According to a latest survey by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) on “unsafe” factors upsetting the public, rising medical costs have become the top concern among Chinese people,

China first started its medical service reform in 1992 to abolish a system under which the government covered more than 90 percent of expenses.

However, soaring medical costs plunged many rural and urban Chinese back into poverty. Currently, there were about 400 million people around the country without any healthcare coverage, according to Ministry of Health.

The new reform plan promised an initial basic medicare network would be set up by 2010 to reduce the widening gap of medical services among different income groups and regions. By 2020, China would establish a basic medicare network for the whole population.
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The Wheel

December 7th, 2007 by kanzxian

Through winter-time we call on spring,
And through the spring on summer call,
And when abounding hedges ring
Declare that winter’s best of all;
And after that there’s nothing good
Because the spring-time has not come–
Nor know that what disturbs our blood
Is but its longing for the tomb.
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