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Al's Morning Meeting

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Al Tompkins
Story ideas that you can localize and enterprise. Posted by 7:30 a.m. Mon-Fri.
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A dozen sites
I'm diggin'


*1. The Electronic Frontier Foundation has outlined how the IRS uses social media in investigations.

2. What's with all the Google anti-trust lawsuits?

*3. The Washington Post reports on why TV reporters have to be  Jacks of All Trades now.

*4. Look at this list of expenses that you might think are tax deductible, but aren't.

5. The number of U.S. millionaires rose 16 percent last year.

6. Find out why there will be a national Eggo waffle shortage until summer.

7. The New York Times explains how women in the work force helped save Social Security.

8. Here are some great databases that newsrooms have created to help connect people with their community.

*9. Watch this online interactive story of the death of journalist Arthur Kasherman.

10. CBS Radio News' Peter King explains how he broadcast from Haiti in the early days after the quake.

11. Find out how healthy your county is.

12. Levelcam lets you stabilize your handheld video.

All of my Diggin' sites are saved on Poynter's del.icio.us page.

EDITOR'S NOTE: Al's Morning Meeting is a compendium of ideas, edited story excerpts and other materials from a variety of Web sites, as well as original concepts and analysis. When the information comes directly from another source, it will be attributed and a link will be provided whenever possible. The column is fact-checked, but relies on the accuracy and integrity of the original sources cited. We will correct errors and inaccuracies when we become aware of them.


Children with Adult Knee Injuries
Maybe it's that doctors just missed these injuries before, but new techniques and tools make it easier to spot torn anterior cruciate ligament (ACL).

It may also be that kids are wearing their knees out at an earlier age by playing multiple sports at a competitive level.

The New York Times explores the story:

In the old days, said Dr. Theodore J. Ganley, director of sports medicine at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and a spokesman for the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons, a child would develop a “trick knee” that made sports difficult, but the real reason was not understood. And most doctors, thinking children did not get A.C.L. tears, did not suspect the real reason.

Now that almost every child with a hurt knee gets a magnetic resonance imaging, doctors are finding the ligament tears on a regular basis.

The other reason for the reported surge in A.C.L. tears, doctors speculate, is that the best athletes are more or less constantly at risk. They play year-round and on multiple teams with frequent games, in which the risk of injury is higher than in practice because of the intensity of play.

“The kids are playing at really highly competitive levels at earlier and earlier ages,” said Dr. Mininder S. Kocher, the associate director of the division of sports medicine at Children’s Hospital in Boston.

Whatever the reason, the increase in diagnoses has created a new problem: what to do about the injury.



Posted by Al Tompkins at 11:00 AM on Feb. 20, 2008
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