Thursday, April 2, 2026

Displays and Exhibits for Healthinfo Island for April 2026

In Second Life, you can teleport to any of the eight displays and exhibits using the SLURLs in this posting. Click on the poster with the same name as the title of the poster set, and you will get a notecard that contains all the text of the posters plus descriptions of the images.  If you click each poster, you will get a private message with additional information and live links.


Lyme Disease
Lyme Disease
http://maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Healthinfo%20Island/195/158/22


April is Oral Cancer Awareness Month
April is Oral Cancer Awareness Month
http://maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Healthinfo%20Island/188/181/24


April is IBS Awareness Month - Woman clutching her stomach
April is IBS Awareness Month
http://maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Healthinfo%20Island/172/155/22


Sjogren's Syndrome
Sjogren's Syndrome
http://maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Healthinfo%20Island/114/79/24


Alzheimer's Disease
Alzheimer's Disease
http://maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Healthinfo%20Island/98/40/26


April is National Donate Life Month
April is National Donate Life Month
http://maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Healthinfo%20Island/50/28/28


What Art is the Ankle
What Art is the Ankle
http://maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Healthinfo%20Island/24/23/30


Nail Fungus
Nail Fungus
http://maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Healthinfo%20Island/21/63/32

Thank you to Mook for assistance with the posters this month.

Central Pavilion of Healthinfo Island
Check out the calming breathing exercise on the back wall!
http://maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Healthinfo%20Island/128/126/24


Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Learn About Website Accessibility… From Songs???

Equal EntryW3C

Thomas Logan of Equal Entry has completed an intriguing project: he has created 86 songs that teach about website accessibility. The result is the WCAG AI Accessibility Album. The album explains the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines in music that’s engaging, memorable, and fun. Through AI-generated music and guided by human insight, these compositions show how accessibility can initiate new ways of learning. Learn about the album here: https://equalentry.com/album/


Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Benefits of an Active Lifestyle

Pickle Ball

There are lots of reasons to exercise regularly and maintain an active lifestyle. Here are a few:

 Along with all the above benefits, an active lifestyle is a lot of fun. 

Saturday, March 14, 2026

What’s Wrong with the “R-word”?

Mental Retardation

The word “retard” (accent on the second syllable) is a verb. It has been in use for at least six centuries to mean to delay, hold back or slow up something. It applies to things like accomplishments, developments or progress.

As with other verbs such as accept, damage, and embarrass, the verb “retard” can become the root word of adjectives by adding -ed (e.g., accepted, damaged, embarrassed, retarded). Verbs can be made into nouns by adding –(t)ion or -ation (e.g., dehumanization, exclusion, marginalization, retardation). Some verbs can also be used as nouns (e.g., bully, damage, respect).

In the early 1900s, intelligence testing was created in order to categorize individuals who might have cognitive developmental delays. “Mental retardation” began to be used as a medical diagnostic term for individuals with lower IQs at about the same time. The wording meant that these people had a slowed mental development.

Then “retard” (accent on the first syllable) became a pejorative noun and “retarded” an insulting adjective. Research in 2010 showed that 92% of youth ages 8-18 years had heard the word “retard” used as a put-down. Other research then showed that about half of YouTube videos used that term negatively.

Why is the pejorative use of “retard” or “retarded” to describe someone a problem? This harsh, harmful slur insults, demeans, and excludes people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. It is a form of harassment that reinforces negative stereotypes, encourages bullying and exclusion, and damages self-esteem. It is an ableist slur.

What is Intellectual Disability?

What terms are preferred? Replace the pejorative use of the words “retard” and “retarded” with more respectful words. To describe an individual, person-first language focuses on the person, not the disability. Say “person with an intellectual disability” or “person with a developmental disability.” The acronym IDD is used to indicate “intellectual and developmental disability.”

Instead of saying an activity, object, or person is “retarded,” use words such as absurd, mistaken, ridiculous, or worthless. Those adjectives are more descriptive and exact, and far less insulting.

Rosa’s Law” was passed in 2010 to remove these insulting words from US federal health, labor, and education policy. It required changing references to “mental retardation” to a new designation as “intellectual disability” or “intellectual disabilities.” This legislation respects the dignity and right to inclusion of persons with IDD.

Special Olympics Team

What can you do to promote elimination of this derogatory term? Spread the Word to End the Word is a Special Olympics and Best Buddies effort to raise awareness of the impact of the “R-word” on people with intellectual disabilities. Their website offers several suggestions about how to counteract this slur, stop bullying, and promote inclusion.

To learn more about people with intellectual and developmental disabilities, please visit the Healthinfo Island poster set titled March is Developmental Disabilities Awareness Month at the following SLURL: http://maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Healthinfo%20Island/188/181/24