These statistics are dismal for manufacturing in the U.S.
Today, public sector (government) employment is 22.2 million vs. just 12.2 million manufacturing jobs.
In other words, there are 10 million or 80% more people employed by the government than making things in this country.
This is the complete opposite from 1979 when government employed 16 million people and manufacturing had 19.6 million workers.
So just 37 years ago, manufacturing employment was 22% more than our public sector employment.
Manufacturing lost 37% of it jobs, while government grew 39%.
It hasn't been since 1989 that there was parity at 18 million between the two sectors.
Lest you think that the loss in manufacturing jobs is due to automation and technology, the Economic Policy Institute states unequivocally:
"Trade, not productivity, is the culprit."
In the U.S. the annual trade deficit is over half a trillion dollars--we are hemorrhaging and no one has been even trying to stop the bleeding.
If we send all our manufacturing prowess and capacity abroad eventually we are not only going to lose our capability to make things, our ingenuity to invent things, but our finances to pay for anything.
Trade is a great thing when it is mutual and equal, not when it is one-sided and damaging to our economy and jobs.
Bad political decisions mean a poorer future for our economy and our nation. ;-)
(Source Photo: Andy Blumenthal)
Showing posts with label Hemorrhaging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hemorrhaging. Show all posts
November 8, 2016
February 4, 2014
From Flat Tires To Wounded Warriors
Totally awesome new technology breakthrough for treating hemorraging patients from the battlefield to the obstetrics ward.
Popular Science reports how a pocket-size syringe filled with sponges can stop bleeding in seconds.
Instead of having to apply wads of gauze and apply pressure"that doesn't always work...[and] medic must pull out all the gauze and start over again," the injection of sponges into the wound "boosts survival and spares injured soldiers from additional pain."
This same technology developed by RevMedx for the military is being adapted for postpartum hemmorages, and I would imagine could eventually be used in other serious bleeding cases whether caused by accident, trauma, in surgery, or other medical necessity.
The sponges are about 1-centimeter circles and are coated with a blood-clotting, antimicrobial substance.
Once injected, the sponges expand to about 20 times their size to fill the wound, apply enough pressure to stop the bleending, and clings to moist surfaces, so they aren't forced out by gushing blood.
The sponges have X-shaped markers on each that are visible on an x-ray image to ensure none are left inside.
The solution is sterile, biocompatible and in the future may be biodegradable so they don't have to be removed from the body.
And to think that the inspiration was Fix-a-Flat foam for emergency tire repair. ;-)
From Flat Tires To Wounded Warriors
Labels:
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Blood,
Clotting,
DoD,
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Injection,
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Lifesaving,
Medicine,
Obstetrics,
Postpartum,
Surgery,
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Syringe,
Trauma,
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