I still work with Meditech Magic, which is derived from MUMPS. Meditech was founded by Neil Pappalardo, the original developer of MUMPS. A strange system for sure, but it is incredibly fast and reliable. Since the early 2000s it has run on top of Windows Server, and uses a proprietary terminal emulator and encrypted telnet for establishing connections to the system.
Magic has long been eclipsed by their newer 3-tier and web platforms, though there's still lots of Magic installations still out there.
The actual core OS is wild how little of the actual Windows OS is being "used". A full release of the MAGIC OS from Meditech is only a ~30MB ISO.
MAGIC relies on the Operating System Abstraction Layer (OSAL) to run MAGIC on top of Windows. It's almost like a stub, but when you boot the Windows box up it'll boot up, auto-log-in, and dump to a full screen OSAL console waiting for you to IPL the OS with various commands (like SCSI PLEASE to list boot devices).
Networking within OSAL (and in turn MAGIC) is performed by a protocol add-on in Windows attached to the NIC -- it itself handles the rest of TCP/IP itself in usermode once IPL'd.
I'm a former caretaker on a team that had a MAGIC system for historical data -- we moved onto 6.x from there, and then I moved on from healthcare IT at that point.
"The best advice is very simple. Read the label. Acetaminophen is safe if you know how much you're taking. And be sure when combining medications not to exceed four thousand milligrams each day."
As with any medication, you have to follow the directions, be safe, and smart.
Except those doses might not be right if you're consuming certain things that interact with those drugs that seem innocuous. Like Grapefruit, for example. If you consume grapefruit and take acetaminophen, more of the drug will get into your bloodstream than expected, and prescriptions doses won't take that into account. You have to be careful taking a lot of drugs if you eat grapefruit, btw, for this reason, not just acetaminophen.
"White grapefruit juice increased concentrations of acetaminophen in mice both 1 hour and 2 hours after feeding compared to controls. In contrast, pink grapefruit juice increased acetaminophen concentrations 2 hours after feeding compared to controls."[1]
Blood concentrations rise because grapefruit slows liver processing. That's not the same as grapefruit increasing the risk of acetaminophen liver damage, which is the OD concern. I'm not saying it doesn't, but I've never read that warning and I've been taking it for fifteen years. You'd want to show the research that states that grapefruit increases acetaminophen toxicity.
They even sell extended release acetaminophen, which prolongs liver processing. Though, I'm not a fan because I think it is rougher on the liver. But health damaging risk is another issue.
"And be sure when combining medications not to exceed four thousand milligrams each day."
That's all very well if people adhere to the instructions but many don't. It's pretty clear why this is so. First, it's an OTC drug and most people associate that with not being as efficacious as drugs that are prescribed by a doctor. Second, people believe OTC drugs to be safe because they are OTC drugs. Third, with the other two factors in mind, given that acetaminophen (paracetamol) is barely an effective painkiller, they opt to up the dose in the hope of obtaining relief.
When I take the drug I'm careful not to take more than 4000mg because of its dangers, in fact I don't ever recall ever taking the maximum daily amount.
I also know the reasons why acetaminophen is dangerous and that further raises my caution. A metabolite of acetaminophen, NAPQI, is toxic to liver cells, it also reduces production of glutathione the agent the liver uses to mop up toxic metabolites. Thus, all's well until the glutathione runs out, after that NAPQI is free to do its damage.
The FDA, doctors and the medical profession need to explain in very simple terms by way of major campaign the reasons for why the drug becomes very dangerous after a certain threshold.
I'm sure an advertising agency could produce a pithy explanation the public would understand (and it should be printed on the box). Irrespective, we urgently need to do something to reduce the thousands of annual acetaminophen poisonings.
When will T-Mobile take accountability for their repeated data breaches and fix the systemic issues? Is there anyone in the company who cares enough to do something?
The annual T-Mobile data breach is a tradition at this point. 2022 was set to break that tradition but the breach just happened to run a few weeks late.
The FTC filing says they first got popped in November 2022, so it’s still an annual tradition.
Also, they only report the breaches they actually know about. From my understanding of T-mobile, they probably only find a breach when someone completely stumbles into it. For every one they discover I bet there’s 10 they don’t, hah