Archive for October, 2009

 

Uncover Ostomy

October 4th, 2009 by Kevin A. Barnes

Yesterday (October 3, 2009) was World Ostomy Day and a college student in Canada launched a unique awareness campaign. The Uncover Ostomy campaign takes a provocative look at ostomies,1 and tries to dispel the social stigma that many individuals attach to living with an ostomy.

Uncover OstomyJessica Grossman is a 20 year old University of Western Ontario media studies student, an actor and a model. She was diagnosed with Crohn’s disease at age 9 and underwent ileostomy surgery at age 13 to have her diseased colon removed. In grade 12, Jessica final project in one class was to create a media awareness campaign on a topic of her choosing. She chose to do an ostomy awareness campaign, which was published in “a few magazines” and helped her win a scholarship to attend the University of Western Ontario for Media Studies. To spread the message further, Jessica approached the Intestinal Disease Education and Awareness Society (IDEAS) organization in Canada and they partnered with her to implement a broad online campaign. Read the rest of this entry »

  1. Ostomies are a category of diversionary surgeries. There are three major types: a colostomy is made from the large intestine (colon); an ileostomy is made from the small intestine (ileum); and a urostomy is a diversion of the urinary tract. The most common reasons for ostomy surgery include inflammatory bowel diseases (such as Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis), cancer, birth defects and trauma. []
  • Share/Bookmark
Categories: Crohn's Disease | Tags: , ,
Comments: No Comments »

Where’s Kevin?

October 4th, 2009 by Kevin A. Barnes

First off, I apologize for not posting anything for three weeks. As someone once observed, “sometimes life gets in the way of living.“1

The good news is that my health is stable, my Crohn’s is quiet and I’m feeling better than I have in a long, long time. (Yes, Virginia, occasionally hospitals do make you healthier.) The reason I dropped under the radar screen is that life became very busy almost the moment I left the hospital,2 and likely will remain that way until almost the end of the year.

Project XAn extremely cool opportunity which I’ve been trying to create for the better part of this year has finally come together. I’m not allowed to say anything yet,3 but I’m loving every minute of it. And “every minute of it” really has become every minute outside of my regular job. Who would have thought that late nights and weekends could be so much fun? Read the rest of this entry »

  1. I did quite a bit of digging trying to find out who originally said this, but couldn’t find a reliable attribution. That probably means either the phrase is a common saying, or I’ve gotten the actual wording wrong. []
  2. Of course, I also had a week’s worth of work projects, emails and phone messages to dig through at the same time everything else became busy. []
  3. Confidentiality and Non-Disclosure Agreements, thinly veiled threats from guys who look like supporting characters in the Sopranos, you know the drill. []
  • Share/Bookmark
Categories: Crohn's Disease, Personal | Tags: , , , ,
Comments: 2 Comments »