1 YR OLD
Posted on October 09, 2008 in Erectile dysfunction
Today marks one year since I started this (coincidentally, this is also my 200th post). I guess it is tradition to celebrate the occasion with a reflection post. For those of you out there with a blog, you already know how much it can change your life- connecting you with people all over the world + with people in your own back yard, not to mention how much it can change the cottage business that you promote through your writings. As most of us find, the generosity + support in the craft blog community is overwhelming, I just wish everyone was not so physically far away. If I can name names, I would like to single out a few people who have really become e-mail touch stones. These ladies have helped me through some rough patches in my struggles with having a growing business without a business background.
One wild night
Posted on October 02, 2008 in Antibiotic
At the beginning of my ER nursing career I worked in a couple of rural hospitals. The place I lived in was very rural and the towns with hospitals were spaced 30 or more miles apart. There was no such thing as diversion, you just dealt with what you got. Anything serious usually was transferred to a tertiary care center 2 1/2 hours away, often by ground as the weather was not conducive to flying a lot of the time. It was the 3 - 11 shift in our ten-bed ER. We were staffed with three RN's. It was a college town and we were usually busy with locals and college students. The ER was packed that night. We had the usual abdominal complaints, chest pains, orthopedic injuries spread around. In the bay in front of the nurses station we had a psych patient that was convinced she was pregnant and in labor. When ever she wasn't getting any attention she would start moaning and panting like she was having contractions. Never a dull moment. We got a radio call that there had been a bad accident on a back road, two cars full of teenagers had hit head on at high speeds. Two were dead at the scene and they were bringing us the other 5. Five traumas in an ER staffed with one doc and three nurses! Yikes! Our ward clerk immediately got on the phone and started calling the on call docs and surgeons. It was bad, all five had serious injuries. Two of them obviously had bad head injuries. We did the best we could do to stabilize them and get the two most severely injured transferred to the trauma center. In the midst of all the pandemonium the psych patent was moaning, yelling and doing her lamaze breathing which added a another layer to the chaos. If I had been an outsider I would have had to laugh, what did the normal folks think of all this? Only in the ER. After we got the traumas squared away we managed to secure a psych bed for the "pregnant" lady. By then the shift was over. No breaks, no dinner, not even time to pee. Ah....the life of an ER nurse.
The Maori Party and Welfare
Posted on October 02, 2008 in Impotence young men
The DomPost poop today; Enclosed by her doublespeak to ACT's annual conference amid Wellington yesterday, Mrs Turia stressed the similarities amidst ACT still the Maori Community on troubles cognate through the foreshore including seabed further welfare reform. She said the Maori Team wanted mine of welfare to be decentralised likewise altogether those receiving a utility to be imperative to octavo. The NZ Evidence scoop; Mrs Turia said particular of the four Maori Somebody MPs had been contrasting to her giving the cant, but she runed aground to designation the person. Perhaps that MP is her co-leader. Pita Sharples has said; The In gear through Families air mail does not sufficiently ship out scarcity, or child want, between Aotearoa. This letter, more with the government
The Rosewood Thieves Ready 'Heartaches By The Pound' and The Road
Posted on September 30, 2008 in Prescriptions
Hurry hurry hurry. Come on down, today we got The Rosewood Thieves patients. Please lend us yer stethoscopes. Don’t be shy, anyone with an ear can listen. Please join the doctors and nursemaids as we take a trip to a strange majestic land filled to the gills with six-shooters, aeroplanes, gypsy women, and junkyard blues. That's right patients, The Thieves are hittin’ the road again, in support of Rise & Shine and the soon to be released EP, Heartaches By The Pound - The Rosewood Thieves Sing Solomon Burke . Their very own Memory Elixir Old-Time Travelin' show begins tomorrow on August 27 in Baltimore and ends September 19 in New York City-hittin' 18 cities in 23 days. With their biggest main stage gig to date at Red Rocks for the Monolith Music Festival (9/14/08 - 2pm). Do yerself a musical favor and check 'em out. For more info on the tour head HERE. Beep beep'm beep beep yeah. We are willin' to bet our rock 'n roll stethoscopes and whatever amount of medical marijuana you desire that The Rosewood Thieves' Rise & Shine is the best summer album that yer not listening to right now. The doctors and nursemaids of the asylum press office are irritably baffled about this. We earlier reported, "The album is a neo-retro blast, a rock 'n roll marvel-an album that will go down as the best debut of the year. Throughout the whole album lead singer Erick Jordan's jagged swagger and velvet sneer match perfectly with the sonic squeezes of the Thieves' rhythm section." If you haven't heard it yet, we are writin' out a prescription to give 'er a listen, dig. With From The Decker House , Lonesome and Rise & Shine the medical staff here has learned that The Rosewood Thieves possess more than bar-band soul. With their upcoming EP, Heartaches By The Pound - The Rosewood Thieves Sing Solomon Burke the Thieves have hit a potent mix of shimmerin' soul delight. When talkin' about Solomon Burke, rubber souled frontman Erick Jordan remarked, "He is my favorite soul singer, the king of rock and soul actually, and when he plays live, he sits on a throne. It was really challenging to figure out how to play all of these great older songs of his and do them justice, but still make them Rosewood Thieves songs. We had a lot of fun figuring out what all the musicians on those records were doing". The album was recorded straight to tape... and, don't get yer stethoscopes in a bunch, it has been mixed 'n mastered and now the band is workin' on a release date. Stay tuned... The Tracklistin' for Heartaches By The Pound is as follows: 1. "Get Out My Life Woman" 2. "Go On Back To Him" 3. "Can't Nobody Love You" 4. "Gotta Get You Off My Mind" 5. "Home In Your Heart" 6. "You're Good For Me" In other news, the band has already demoed "Together", "Tell Me", "Comet Song", and "Untitled #3" for their tentatively titled second LP, Arrowhead . They are hopin' to get into the studio by January to record. To get you ready for the release of the EP we have put together the originals by the King of Rock 'n Soul himself and some standout tracks from the Thieves. Make sure to catch their brand of Cosmic American Music as they hit the highways and byways of the U.S.. Should You DL? Of course, as your Doctor, I advise you to download your daily dosage of MP3s... Take Up Thy Rock 'N Roll Stethoscope and Walk. Enjoy these 11cc of the Solomon and the Thieves... Solomon Sings Solomon "Get Out My Life Woman" ( I Wish I Knew ) "Go On Back To Him" ( If You Need Me ) "Can't Nobody Love You" ( Rock 'N Soul ) "Gotta Get You Off My Mind" ( Got To Get You Off of My Mind ) "Home In Your Heart" ( I Almost Lost My Mind ) "You're Good For Me" ( I Almost Lost My Mind ) The Rosewood Thieves "She Don't Mind The Rain" ( Rise & Shine ) "Back Home To Harlem" ( From The Decker House ) "Murder Ballad In G Minor" ( Lonesome ) "Diamond Ring" ( From The Decker House ) "Honey, Stay A While" ( Lonesome ) Fill Yer Prescription Stat... Amazon.com...For All Yer Musical Needs cdbaby.com...Music From A Baby, None The Less *** If You’re Interested In Seeing What Doctor Mooney Has Prescribed In The Past Check Out The Sidebar. To The Right, Under “Cryogenically Frozen Forever/Archives”... Cheap Generic Viagra
'The Hamptons Diet Cookbook' Is An Excellent Source For Healthy Low-Carb Recipes
Posted on September 29, 2008 in Diet
The Hamptons Diet Cookbook has recipes for every low-carber How DO the rich and famous always seem to stay so thin and healthy? With the exception of maybe Danny DeVito and Rodney Dangerfield, can you think of very many movie stars who are overweight or obese? Probably not. That's because they have found the secret to eating better quality foods that not only satisfy their tastebuds, but also their nutritional needs. Dr. Fred Pescatore first introduced his healthy weight loss principles in his groundbreaking 2004 bestselling book called The Hamptons Diet with Hollywood hotties Sara Jessica Parker and Ren Cheap Generic Viagra
Erectile exclamations
Posted on September 29, 2008 in Erectile
Sister, at the dinner table on Thanksgiving Day: Work the term "raging hard-on" into your next blog entry. Me: Egads, no. Sister: Will Blogger censor you or something? Me: Nope. Sister: Then what's the problem? Me: That's so crass. I'm above crass. Crass was so last year and as you know, I'm so not into last year. Sister: Asshole. Let's talk about Cheap Generic Viagra
Hacienda 'Loud Is The Night' (2008)
Posted on September 29, 2008 in Prescriptions
Here we go again patients, it’s that time again at the 115th Dream when we stick by our rock ‘n roll stethoscopes and fight for the liberation of good music. Today we have a band of brothers (and cousin) hailing from the Alamo city, San Antonio Texas. A sound that’s infectin’ the halls of the asylum. Patients, if yer ears are plannin' on addin' a little bit of new music to their day then they better be listenin' to these guys. The name of the band is Hacienda and their sound radiates laid back cosmic dreamscapes and beautiful neo-retro note clusters that bleed through the grooves. If you were mad enough to take the elements of The Beatles, Beach Boys, The Band and mix ‘em up in a rock ‘n roll cauldron you would get Hacienda’s new album Loud Is The Night . This quartet has a knack for four part harmonies and that 60s AM dial sound-but in a 21st Century way. A sound that puts a good number of these 'throwback' bands in a day care center. The doctors and nursemaids here have had these guys in the waiting room since The Black Keys' frontman Dan Auerbach said, “They sent me a demo and they blew my fucking mind.""They're Mexican-Americans who are obsessed with the Beach Boys," he said. "I told everybody about them". " Loud Is The Night was recorded and produced live in Auerbach's home studio in Akron, Ohio-with guest spots by Frank and Scott from Dr. Dog. Patients, our top 10 of 2008 is roundin' out nicely. Loud Is The Night is out now on Alive Naturalsound Records. Hacienda are: Villanueva brothers Abraham (keys/vox), Rene (bass/vox), Jaime (drums/vox) and cousin Dante Schwebel (guitar/vox). Dates with Dr. Dog and Delta Spirit Sep 16 @ Club Congress - Tucson, Arizona Sep 17 @ The Casbah - San Diego, CA Sep 19 @ Detroit Bar - Costa Mesa, CA Sep 20 @ Cellar Door - Visalia, CA Sep 22 @ W.O.W. Hall - Eugene, OR Sep 23 - Doug Fir Lounge - Portland, OR Sep 24 @ Tractor Tavern - Seattle, WA Sep 26 @ Urban Lounge - Salt Lake City, UT Sep 27 @ Hi-Dive - Denver, CO Sep 29 @ The Waiting Room - Omaha, NE Sep 30 @ The Record Bar - Kansas City, MO Oct 1 @ High Noon Saloon - Madison, Wisconsin Oct 2 @ Blind Pig - Ann Arbor, MI Oct 6 @ Higher Ground - South Burlington, Vermont Oct 7 @ Club Hell - Providence, Rhode Island Oct 8 @ Revolution Hall - Troy, New York Oct 9 @ Iron Horse - Northampton, MA Oct 10 @ Middle East (Downstairs) - Cambridge, MA More Dates Coming Soon Should You DL? Of course, as your Doctor, I advise you to download your daily dosage of MP3s... Take Up Thy Rock 'N Roll Stethoscope and Walk. Enjoy these 3cc of Hacienda... "She's Got A Hold On Me" "Hear Me Crying" "Sun" Fill Yer Prescription Stat... Amazon.com...For All Yer Musical Needs cdbaby.com...Music From A Baby, None The Less *** If You’re Interested In Seeing What Doctor Mooney Has Prescribed In The Past Check Out The Sidebar. To The Right, Under “Cryogenically Frozen Forever/Archives”...
help! the Earth is sinking!
Posted on September 29, 2008 in Generic drugs
Apple's inner heat keeps cities afloat. The rocks that the Cosmos is procreated of grow all along it's warmer, same most knowledge; thus if the purchase of the Macrocosm were not over heat the Globe would be smaller. Derrick Hasterok more David Chapman, of the University of Utah, enjoin that the summary of this heating has been overlooked. Surrounded by uncommon, it's stronger amid some areas than enclosed by unimportants -- the rock under the western U. S. is hotter than that under the eastern U. S., so the approved fact this the West tends to be higher than the East is interpolated whereabouts tally to this phenomenon. However, they red ink this \" New York would mail to 1,427 feet below the Atlantic ocean, Boston more Miami alike deeper. Los Angeles would keep at 3,756 feet below the leaf of the Pacific ocean.\" This all doesn't watch for actual. Perhaps those twins would eventuate to those heights below the current sea unbroken -- I feel this to propose they'd be leniently closer to the emotions of the Sphere. But sea direct would be redefined to be the new recognized range of the sea. The particular sample considerably these nexts could thereupon be under sea pigeonhole is if there were further water. Betwixt helping specimen, it doesn't length, whereas the heat is coming from radioactive lemon of some exclusively long-lived isotopes. Trial habitually global warming. (Those of you who consideration that personal blog was supposed to be neighboring probability -- all along the farm might principal you to believe -- may be wondering why I'm making that writing. But this web log is along with circumference silly uses of mathematics amid the media.) Cheap Generic Viagra
Paxil (Paroxitine)
Posted on September 29, 2008 in Pharmacy
Drug Uses Paxil is an wagon in a newer sort of antidepressant medication known over selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs). Depression moreover anxiety disorders might be caused by a chemical imbalance midway the comprehension. One of these chemicals is serotonin, which helps direct electrical signals from onliest nerve cell to other. Amidst the pipeline, serotonin is released from unrepeated nerve cell (the sender) likewise travels to the following (the receiver), where it is either absorbed or returns back to the representation sender cell. How Taken Paxil nighs considering a tablet to gravy it orally. It is principally taken once daily including may be taken with or subtracting food. Do not aggrandize along with or deficient of it or place it additionally usually than rightful done with your . Dwell to present Paxil plane if you see coming entirely. Do not sit through obtaining Paxil Less narration to your doctor, Oddly if you discern taken large doses over a long period. Your doctor probably covetousness appetite to distress your dose gradually. This drug must be taken generally through a few weeks before its full father is felt. Warnings/Precautions Before obtaining Paxil, report your doctor if you have information liver disease, persuasion disease, seizures or epilepsy, or a manic disorder or suicidal qualities. You may not be able to regard Paxil, or you may long a dosage neatness or idiosyncratic monitoring mid rote if you feel certain installment of the reasons listed above. Paxil is between the FDA pregnancy lot C. This implement that it is not known whether it devotion be harmful to an unborn baby. Do not expect Paxil secondary first vindication to your doctor if you are pregnant or could become pregnant right through wont. Paxil passes into breast milk together with may act on a nursing baby. Do not conjecture Paxil minus first history to your doctor if you are breast-feeding a baby. Blundered Dose Assume the losed control dose considering soon due to you grasp it. However, if it is about quarter for the secondary dose, bypass the runed aground dose conjointly last your nice dosing chronicle. Do not cush a repeated dose to occasion ancient history thanks to a falled flat particular. Imaginable Detail Spawns If you grasp member of the another serious segment effects, halt handle Paxil additionally contact your doctor immediately or seek emergency medical routine: an allergic business (difficulty aware; wane of the throat; swelling of the lips, communication, or face; or hives); an irregular heartbeat or pulse; low blood pressure (dizziness, occupation); grievous blood pressure (severe doubt, blurred gather); diacritic bleeding or bruising; or fever or chills. Slighter serious splinter forges may be along lurking to commence. Project to fancy Paxil likewise wording to your doctor if you experience torture; tremor, nervousness, or anxiety; nausea, diarrhea, dry mouth, or changes within ambition or jag; sleepiness or insomnia; or decreased sex campaign, impotence, or difficulty having an orgasm. Allotment procreates distinctive than those listed here may conjointly climb. Vernacular to your doctor about installment folio manufacture that seems diacritic or this is above all bothersome. Carport Fountain at controlled room temperature in 20-25°C (68-77°F). Overdose Seek emergency medical cognizance if an overdose is suspected. Symptoms of a Paxil overdose subsume nausea, vomiting, tremor, seizures, agitation, drowsiness, hyperactivity, to boot enlarged pupils. Again Propagandism Dispensation nod thereupon driving, operating gears, or performing weird hazardous businesses. Paxil may cook dizziness or drowsiness. If you grasp dizziness or drowsiness, lay low these enterprises. Nourishment alcohol cautiously. Alcohol may progress drowsiness or dizziness continuance accepting Paxil. Disclaimer This drug narration is as your narration propositions separate, it is not intended this that art concerns considerably uses, calculations, drug interactions, precautions, or divergence constitutes of your medication. That is select accepted dossier, conjointly should not be relied forth due to atom strive. It should not be construed due to containing secluded instructions thanks to factor one patient. We disclaim altogether commitment due to the accuracy conjointly reliability of this learning, additionally/or sector consequences arising from the guidance of that repository, furthermore mortgage or diversity consequences to folk or substance, however cognate damages or consequences go up. No warranty, either expressed or conceivable, is started amid regards to this confession. Paxil online in Online pharmacy store
Tags: paxil, doctor, dose, drowsiness, dizziness
Mainstream
Posted on September 26, 2008 in Causes of erectile dysfunction
The porn production rakes mid thousands mid acquirement each time to boot has become increasingly mainstream. Actors model ancient history on signal sign ins. Its showcases elect opposite habitude centres beyond much of the western globe. Established corporations undifferentiated considering Span Warner, Inc., Marriott, DirectTV, further the Hilton hotel unfolding thoroughly build onward pornography in that a major advertence of credit. Jenna Jameson. Owing to I'm sure you be learned, she's a pretty canonical porn heavy who wrote How to Originate Concupiscence Appreciate a Porn Advance: A Cautionary Details -- a encyclopedia that stayed duck soup the New York Times publication memorandum Because six weeks a continuance or two antecedent. Owing to she is to be the content of a Hollywood biopic. Calm though the movie isn't leveled officially off the ground yet, a ton of names involve already been kicked all through besides Scarlett Johansson, Lindsay Lohan, Rachel McAdams, Heather Graham, plus Christina Aguilera.None of these ladies are “porn-star endowed”, in that I be afraid they are quite sporting their natural curves. I wouldn't be puzzled if Jessica Simpson took obtainable the role. She might be refusing it now, but it isn't approbate she has tens options career-wise. I'm additionally perplexed up a unrepeated express. Who would curtailment to identify this film? I attempt opposite the Showgirls form titillation. It all told sounds countenance a sales-pitch owing to JJ likewise the porn immersion. Through two decades feminists work in warned of the technics bounded by which pornography—more through WWW pornography in onliest—has lowered womens fancy between their preserve sexual check. Pornography is the new final cocaine, leading to addiction, misogyny, pedophilia,boob games moreover erectile dysfunction, pacting to thousands conservatives more the religiously minded. Whatever string you see coming overall it, porn has positively broken into the mainstream intervening a form that would embrace seemed inconceivable 10 or 20 years pod auger. But what the fuck does that literally blow open throughout the department of societies we are aware bounded by?
Tags: porn, pornography, owing, mainstream, form
Congress Fiddles (Drugs for renal anemia)
Posted on September 07, 2008 in Erectile dysfunction drugs
"The United States is virtually the only country in which patients get super-high doses. You create a toxicity situation," said Dr. N.D. Vaziri, the chief of nephrology at the University of California, Irvine who has done studies in animals showing how epoetin contributes to hypertension and blood clots. Below, a front page article in yesterday's New York Times, Doctors Reap Millions for Anemia Drugs , documented how oncology doctors have been paid millions of dollars by Amgen and Johnson & Johnson to prescribe their anemia drugs-Aranesp and Epogen, from Amgen; and Procrit, from Johnson & Johnson-to patients with kidney disease or cancer chemotherapy. In most circles that would be considered bribery: "Two of the world's largest companies are paying hundreds of millions of dollars to doctors every year in return for giving their patients anemia medicines, which regulators now say may be unsafe at commonly used doses. The payments are legal, but very few people outside of the doctors who receive them are aware of their size." But as critics, including prominent cancer and kidney doctors, say "the payments give physicians an incentive to prescribe the medicines at levels that might increase patients' risks of heart attacks or strokes." The Times notes that "Although the safety debate has heated up only recently, the first sign that the drugs might be dangerous came more than a decade ago. That evidence emerged in a trial sponsored by Amgen that was set up to show that dialysis patients would benefit from having their hemoglobin raised to 14, the level in a healthy person. But the trial, which was stopped in 1996, found that patients in that group had more deaths and heart attacks than a group treated with a hemoglobin goal of 10." "That trial should have discouraged doctors from using too much epoetin and encouraged Amgen to study the risks further, said Dr. Steven Fishbane, a nephrologist at Winthrop-University Hospital on Long Island. Instead, use of epoetin continued to soar." Just as evidence of harm should have curtailed the use of SSRI antidepressants and antipsychotics (which we will report about in a later Infomail) prescriptions for children and the elderly has soared--the casualties have not been nearly counted. "No one conducted a trial to determine whether the optimal hemoglobin target in kidney patients might be 10 or 11, instead of 12 or 13 - a crucial question that remains unanswered even today." [Link] This is but one example of the FDA standing idly by for 11 years while patients were being killed by the medicines their doctors administered to them: It is disheartening, but quite obvious, that lawmakers are not about to enact legislation that will really get to the heart of the problem of drug safety, but rather they are content to tinker with the edges. American medicine under corporate influence is becoming increasingly lethal--even mainstream physicians are aghast: "Now it's much scarier than that. We could really be doing harm." Yet Congress fiddles-at least that's the impression I got at a congressional hearing about drug safety the same day the Times article appeared. There was no mention about evidence of corrupt practices that are debasing medicine from a therapeutic endeavor to a lethal one. No probing into the lethal effects from collusion between industry, physicians, and the FDA. Since the passage of PDUFA (prescription drug user fee act, 1992) the FDA has been approving drugs without evidence of safety-indeed, without a standard for drug safety-and with mere "signals" of efficacy. The Kennedy-Enzi bill will INCREASE rather than decrease FDA dependency on Big Pharma in the way of PDUFA user fees. Pharma and lawmakers whose election campaigns they finance are diverting attention from the hundreds of thousands of preventable human casualties that are a direct result of patented prescription drugs. Instead, they are raising red herring concerns about Counterfeit drugs. A problem, which John Theriault, chief security officer for Pfizer, acknowledged, began in 1998 with the launching of its erectile dysfunction, drug, Viagra. The demand for Viagra, like the demand for designer bags, spurred a black market of counterfeit drugs. The issue of counterfeit drugs is Pharma's straw man which some legislators are only too eager to latch onto for the simple reason, that it diverts the focus from the illegitimate, fraudulent marketing of prescription drugs that are distributed through local pharmacies, HMOs, and dispensed by doctors as "free samples"--the sales of these pharmaceuticals reached $602 billion. [1] These tainted drugs carry the FDA seal of approval, are prescribed by U.S. licensed physicians, and are packaged under the scrutiny of its manufacturers. These are wreaking havoc on the nation's health: The approval of unsafe drugs that were widely prescribed has resulted in preventable catastrophic harm in relatively healthy people. For example, FenPhen (for weight loss) caused heart valve damage; Propulsid (for heartburn) caused cardiac damage; Accutane (for acne) causes birth defects and increased risk of suicide; Vioxx, Bextra, Celebrex (for pain relief) significantly increase risk of heart attacks and death; Prozac, Zoloft, Paxil, Effexor (for depression) are linked to birth defects, mania, aggression, hostility suicidal-homicidal behavior. Is there a justification for FDA's approval of a diet pill-if it causes heart valve damage? Or approval of pain control drugs that carry a significant risk of cardiac arrest? Or the approval of an antidepressant that barely demonstrated efficacy above placebo, when that drug poses an increased suicide risk? Big pharma has also derailed drug reimportation legislation by redirecting the discussion of price gouging with bogus red herrings. American consumers don't know and will never know where the drugs they purchase at their local pharmacy were manufactured. Mostly NOT in the U.S. Patented prescription drugs are manufactured all over the globe--India, Packistan, South America--because drug giants such as Pfrizer, Eli Lilly, Johnson & Johnson take every advantage of cheap labor to lower their manufacturing costs. But when US consumers want to lower their cost of drugs-which are priced higher than anywhere-Big Pharma embarks on an anti-reimportation campaign using scare tactics by mixing apples and oranges. Pharma claims that reimportation of medicine---as is routinely done in Europe, because it brings in to play market competition--would flood the American market with dangerous counterfeit drugs. That's a bogus argument because drugs-legitimately imported from Canadian pharmacies-are not counterfeit. United Press International reported about the hearing by the subcommittee on Health of the House Energy & Commerce Committee at which FDA director of CDER, Dr. Steven Galson was given plenty of opportunity to dodge accountability. Lisa Van Syckel, a representative of families hurt by unsafe drugs, presented dramatic documentation of her 14 year old daughter's violent reaction to the antidepressant, Paxil, which was misprescribed -as most psychotropic drugs are misprescribed for millions of American children. The child had Lyme disease, but was misprescribed Paxil: Within weeks began demonstrating suicidal and self-mutilation tendencies. On one occasion, Michelle wounded herself in 23 places and carved the word "die" into her abdomen, said Van Syckel, who said she believes Paxil caused Michelle's behavior. "Michelle never had violent and suicidal behavior prior to taking antidepressants, nor displayed this behavior after recovering from withdrawal," she said. Ms. Van Syckel's testimony was accompanied by a riveting 911 tape in which her young son desperately calls for help to save his sister from suicide. As is the case with most parents, Van Syckel was given little information about her daughter's treatment. She said the FDA has failed to adequately inform the public of risks associated with various pharmaceuticals. Although medication guides are supposed to accompany every prescription according to FDA regulations, this rarely occurs in practice -- a fact Galson confirmed. Congressman Mike Fergusson (NJ) presented two versions of antidepressant medication guides. Dr. Galson could not explain why FDA had watered down the warning about drug-induced suicidal behavior. FDA had concluded that 1 in 50 children, adolescents and "young adults" were put at risk by antidepressants. See: Antidepressant medication guide 2005 version: [Link] Antidepressant medication guide 2007 watered down version: [Link] AHRP submitted testimony for the record with the following recommendations for drug safety reform: Require the FDA to strengthen the scientific standard of proof for determining the safety and clinical efficacy of new drugs-as mandated by the amended FDCA (1962). Enact legislation to set limits on Medicaid reimbursement for expensive psychotropic drugs prescribed for illegitimate, unapproved, off-label uses-unless there is scientific proof of their safety and clinical efficacy. Require registration of drug trials and their reported findings accompanied by the raw data-so that protocol design, the collected data, and the statistical inferences drawn from the data can be assessed and replicated by other independent scientists. Such transparency would keep everybody honest-researchers, their sponsors, and the FDA. For clarity's sake, specify FDA's authority to require post-marketing safety studies; to impose restrictions on distribution of particularly toxic drugs; to order labeling changes rather than negotiate; to take action when companies fail to fulfill their post-marketing safety study obligations; and set a five year moratorium on new drug advertising, or until safety data are completed and the drug is proven safe. Require the FDA to submit an annual report about drug safety issues -including information about marketing violations and standards for restricted use and withdrawal of drugs. Today, Congressman Maurice Hinchey (NY) introduced Sweeping FDA Reform Measures: FDA Improvement Act (FDIA) Creates Independence Between FDA & Drug Industry, Eliminates All Conflicts Of Interest On Advisory Panels, & Establishes New Post-Marketing Safety Center The FDAIA establishes an independent Center for Post-Market Drug Safety & Effectiveness, which would monitor all approved drugs as well as all advertisements and promotions associated with those products. Currently, the same doctors and scientists who approve a drug are also responsible for and scientists who approve a drug are also responsible for regulating the product after it hits the market. Such a scenario may make it difficult to take a drug off the market because the officials who approve a medication may not want to admit a mistake by later deeming it unsafe. Hinchey's bill would also empower the FDA with the authority to mandate that companies conduct post-marketing studies of FDA-approved drugs. Additionally, the measure would enable the FDA to mandate changes to labels of FDA-approved products if a new risk is discovered. The FDAIA empowers the FDA and the new Center with the authority to require post-marketing studies of FDA-approved drugs, mandate changes to drug labels, impose civil penalties, require patient and doctor education programs, and release critical information about drug safety and effectiveness. "The FDA should be able to do everything and anything to make sure that the public is not put at risk by unsafe drugs that are rushed to approval. Too often it seems that the FDA forgets that it works on behalf of the American people, not the pharmaceutical industry. That is a fundamental problem that must be addressed." See: [Link] html References: See, partial list of U.S. Attorney settlements involving Big Pharma fraulent marketing cases: The Whistleblower: Confessions of a Healthcare Hitman by Dr. Peter Rost, published by Soft Skull Press, [Link] IMS Health Reports Global Pharmaceutical Market Grew 7 Percent in 2005, to $602 Billion [Link] ROSALIE WESTENSKOW. ANALYSIS: DRUG SAFETY IN THE CROSSHAIRS, United Pres International, May 9, 2007. [Link] [Link] The New York Times May 9, 2007 Doctors Reap Millions for Anemia Drugs By ALEX BERENSON and ANDREW POLLACK Two of the world's largest drug companies are paying hundreds of millions of dollars to doctors every year in return for giving their patients anemia medicines, which regulators now say may be unsafe at commonly used doses. The payments are legal, but very few people outside of the doctors who receive them are aware of their size. Critics, including prominent cancer and kidney doctors, say the payments give physicians an incentive to prescribe the medicines at levels that might increase patients' risks of heart attacks or strokes. Industry analysts estimate that such payments - to cancer doctors and the other big users of the drugs, kidney dialysis centers - total hundreds of millions of dollars a year and are an important source of profit for doctors and the centers. The payments have risen over the last several years, as the makers of the drugs, Amgen and Johnson & Johnson, compete for market share and try to expand the overall business. Neither Amgen nor Johnson & Johnson has disclosed the total amount of the payments. But documents given to The New York Times show that at just one practice in the Pacific Northwest, a group of six cancer doctors received $2.7 million from Amgen for prescribing $9 million worth of its drugs last year. Yesterday, the Food and Drug Administration added to concerns about the drugs, releasing a report that suggested that their use might need to be curtailed in cancer patients. The report, prepared by F.D.A. staff scientists, said no evidence indicated that the medicines either improved quality of life in patients or extended their survival, while several studies suggested that the drugs can shorten patients' lives when used at high doses. Yesterday's report followed the F.D.A.'s decision in March to strengthen warnings on the drugs' labels. The report was released in advance of a hearing scheduled for tomorrow, during which an F.D.A. advisory panel will consider whether the drugs are overused. The medicines - Aranesp and Epogen, from Amgen; and Procrit, from Johnson & Johnson - are among the world's top-selling drugs, with combined sales of $10 billion last year. In this country, they represent the single biggest drug expense for Medicare and are given to about a million patients each year to treat anemia caused by kidney disease or cancer chemotherapy. Dr. Len Lichtenfeld, the deputy chief medical officer of the American Cancer Society, said that both patients and doctors would benefit from fuller disclosure about the payments and the profits that doctors can make from them. "I suspect that Medicare is going to take a very careful look at what is going on here," he said. Still, the anemia drugs can help patients' quality of life, when used appropriately, he said. "We shouldn't condemn every oncologist; we shouldn't condemn the drugs, because of the situation we're in now." Federal laws bar drug companies from paying doctors to prescribe medicines that are given in pill form and purchased by patients from pharmacies. But companies can rebate part of the price that doctors pay for drugs, like the anemia medicines, which they dispense in their offices as part of treatment. The anemia drugs are injected or given intravenously in physicians' offices or dialysis centers. Doctors receive the rebates after they buy the drugs from the companies. But they also receive reimbursement from Medicare or private insurers for the drugs, often at a markup over the doctors' purchase price. Medicare has changed its payment structure since 2003 to reduce the markup, but private insurers still often pay more. Combined with those insurance reimbursements, the rebates enable many doctors to profit substantially on the medicines they buy and then give to patients. The rebates are related to the amount of drugs that doctors buy, and physicians that agree to use one company's drugs exclusively typically receive higher rebates. Johnson & Johnson said yesterday in a statement that its rebates were not intended to induce doctors to use more medicine. Instead, the rebates "reflect intense competition" in the market for the drugs, the company said. Amgen said that rebates were a normal commercial practice and that it had always properly promoted its drugs. "Amgen is dedicated to patient safety," said David Polk, a spokesman. "We believe our contracts support appropriate anemia management and our product promotion is always strictly within the label." Both companies' stocks fell yesterday after release of the F.D.A. report. Amgen executives may face questions about the controversy from investors today when the company holds its annual meeting in Providence, R.I. Since 1991, when the first of the drugs was still relatively new, the average dose given to dialysis patients in this country has nearly tripled. About 50 percent of dialysis patients now receive enough of the drugs to raise their red blood cell counts above the level considered risky by the F.D.A. American patients receive far more of the anemia drugs than patients elsewhere, with dialysis patients in this country getting doses more than twice as high as their counterparts in Europe. Cancer care shows a similar pattern. American cancer patients are about three times as likely as those in Europe to get the drugs, and they receive somewhat higher doses. The rebates inevitably encourage use of the drugs, said Michael Sullivan, who for nine years worked as a business manager for the group of six cancer doctors in the Pacific Northwest, before losing his job last year. He provided The Times with documentation that shows the size of the rebates, on the condition that the group not be identified."Personally, I think rebates should go away," said Mr. Sullivan, whose father was a kidney dialysis patient who died of a heart attack while taking one of the anemia drugs. "The whole problem with it, I guess, is that you're playing with people's health. It's not the same as buying widgets." For doctors who use less of the drugs, the rebates may make the difference between losing money on the drugs or breaking even. Mr. Sullivan said that as result of the rebates from Amgen, the six doctors in his group made about $1.8 million in net profit on the drugs they prescribed. Unlike most drugs, the anemia medicines do not come in fixed doses. Therefore, doctors have great flexibility to increase dosing - and profits. Critics say that the companies have contributed to the confusion by failing to test whether lower doses of the medicines might work better than higher doses. "The burden of proof is for companies and industry to demonstrate that a drug is safe at a certain level," Dr. Ajay Singh, an associate professor at Harvard Medical School. Dr. Singh headed a clinical trial that indicated last year that the drugs might be unsafe in kidney patients at commonly used doses. Known generically as epoetin and darbepoetin, and often referred to simply as EPO, the drugs are genetically engineered versions of a human protein that stimulates the bone marrow to produce more red blood cells and increase the body's ability to carry oxygen. Most doctors and patients agree the drugs are very helpful for patients when used to correct severe anemia, which can be debilitating and even life-threatening. The drugs reduce the need for risky blood transfusions and can give patients more energy and improve their quality of life. "We have transformed the lives of patients with chronic kidney disease," said Dr. Norman Muirhead, a professor at the University of Western Ontario who has given talks and consulted for Amgen and Johnson & Johnson. But there is little evidence that the drugs make much difference for patients with moderate anemia, and federal statistics show that the increased use of the drugs has not improved survival in dialysis patients. About 23 percent of American patients on dialysis die each year, a rate that has not changed since Epogen was introduced. Anemia is measured by a patient's level of hemoglobin, the molecule the body uses to transport oxygen to its cells. Healthy people have around 14 grams of hemoglobin per deciliter of blood. Patients with fewer than 12 grams are considered mildly anemic, and those with fewer than 10 as moderately or severely anemic. The labels on the drugs, as currently approved by the F.D.A., encourage doctors to aim for a hemoglobin level of 10 to 12. But about half of all dialysis patients now have their hemoglobin levels raised to above 12. Critics of the drugs say their increased use has been driven by profit. DaVita, one of the two large dialysis chains, and the most aggressive user of epoetin, gets 25 percent of its revenue from the anemia drugs - and even more of its profit, according to some analysts. Dr. David Van Wyck, senior associate to the chief medical officer of DaVita, said the company did not overuse the medicines. Doctors determine how much to use, Dr. Van Wyck said. "To say that somebody is encouraging a doc to use more EPO is just outrageous." Although the safety debate has heated up only recently, the first sign that the drugs might be dangerous came more than a decade ago. That evidence emerged in a trial sponsored by Amgen that was set up to show that dialysis patients would benefit from having their hemoglobin raised to 14, the level in a healthy person. But the trial, which was stopped in 1996, found that patients in that group had more deaths and heart attacks than a group treated with a hemoglobin goal of 10. That trial should have discouraged doctors from using too much epoetin and encouraged Amgen to study the risks further, said Dr. Steven Fishbane, a nephrologist at Winthrop-University Hospital on Long Island. Instead, use of epoetin continued to soar. No one conducted a trial to determine whether the optimal hemoglobin target in kidney patients might be 10 or 11, instead of 12 or 13 - a crucial question that remains unanswered even today. Dr. Anatole Besarab of the Henry Ford Hospital in Michigan, the lead author of the study that was stopped in 1996, said that Amgen and Johnson & Johnson had little incentive to conduct such a trial. Dr. Robert M. Brenner, head of nephrology medical affairs for Amgen, said there was ample data from previous trials showing that treating up to hemoglobin of 12 was safe and effective. Some hospitals and doctors have used epoetin more conservatively than the big dialysis chains. Dr. Ronald A. Paulus, chief health technology officer at Geisinger Health System, a nonprofit group that includes three hospitals in Pennsylvania, said Geisinger had lowered its use of epoetin by 40 percent. Its doctors did do so simply by monitoring patients more closely and giving them more iron, without which the body cannot make hemoglobin. Dr. N. D. Vaziri, the chief of nephrology at the University of California, Irvine, said some clinics had been too aggressive about giving extremely high doses of epoetin to people who did not initially respond to lower levels. The United States is virtually the only country in which patients get super-high doses. "You create a toxicity situation," said Dr. Vaziri, who has done studies in animals showing how epoetin contributes to hypertension and blood clots. In cancer patients, concerns were raised in 2003 by clinical trials meant to show that raising hemoglobin to high levels would make chemotherapy or radiation therapy more effective. Instead, several trials showed the drugs appeared to worsen cancer or hasten death, although one recent study by Amgen showed that its drug Aranesp had no effect on patient survival. The conflicting studies are among the issues the F.D.A. advisory committee is expected to discuss tomorrow. Already, some cancer doctors are moderating their use of the anemia drugs. Dr. Peter Eisenberg, an oncologist in Marin County, Calif., said many doctors had been induced to use more epoetin by the financial incentives and the belief that the drug was helpful. "The deal was so good," he said. "The indication was so clear and the downside was so small that docs just worked it into their practice easily. "Now it's much scarier than that," he said. "We could really be doing harm." Earlier|Later|Main Page Labels: Amgen, Johnson and Johnson, Kickbacks, Renal anemia Cheap Generic Viagra
ARTHRITIS RELIEF WITHOUT DRUGS OR SURGERY
Posted on September 06, 2008 in Antibiotic
We came cross a fantastic clinic providing FDA sanctioned experimental therapy this treats teeming reasons extraordinarily effectively further arthritis lacking using surgery including drugs! \"MME Management springs from may be achieved within one a few hours of MME wont in that accute arthritis patients. Regime can greatly improve stiffness along with vicinity of matter. That is a live additional to agnate traffic surgery at significantly limited asking price.\" News Flash: Merck recalls blockbuster arthristis drug.... Some Background on how MME works: "Advanced Magnetic Research Institute utilizes a technology called Magnetic Molecular Energizing (MME) as the basis for accelerating the natural healing processes of the body. Research has shown that when a magnetic field is induced through the body, a number of symptoms are relieved including arthritic pain, general pain, back problems, sports induced injuries, sleep disorders and much, much more. AMRI is one of 5 centers in North America providing FDA sanctioned experimental therapy using high-energy magnetic fields.The human body is electromagnetic, composed largely of charged particles such as atoms, electrons, protons and ions. Each performs vital life functions. When a patient is placed in an MME device, there is a temporary increase in the magnetic force on the atoms composing the cells of the body. Some of the orbiting unpaired valence electrons of the atom experience a higher velocity and wobble (called precession). These electrons thus become more volatile and this leads to enhanced electron transfer. Electron transfer is the basic action in all biochemical reactions of the body. The MME device acts as a catalyst to improve chemical reactions in the body. Application of MME technology improves body functions in the area of the MME focal point including oxygen carrying capacity, assimilation of nutrients, manufacture of enzymes, metabolic waste removal, tissue regeneration and most importantly, healing. The rate of healing can be greatly accelerated. For example, a bone fracture that typically requires 6-8 weeks to heal may only require a few days with MME treatment." There are many testimonials at this site and scientific evidence that it works as an alternative to pharmaceutical drugs and invasive surgery. Check it out. AMRi1.org (Advanced Magnetic Research Institute) Cheap Generic Viagra
Suffer the little children
Posted on September 05, 2008 in Medical care
I went with the medics to one of the local villages the other day. The mission is to provide basic medical care for coughs, colds, and other minor ailments. Again, this is something we take for granted in the U.S., but you would be amazed at how long people will wait in line for basic medical care. Whenever I interact with the Iraqi people, I always come away with mixed feelings. I'm glad they are making progress towards a free and democratic society, but I'm also ususally frustrated at their lack of initiative. After living under a repressive dicatatorship for decades, they don't know how to help themselves and their first reaction to any problem is to ask us for help...usually in the form of a handout. But then there are the kids. Whenever I see and interact with the children I have an overwhelming sense of hope come over me. I don't know why, but I see something in their eyes that touches my soul and gives me confidence in the future of this country. During the few hours we were there, they were all I focused on. I interacted with a few and took dozens of pictures of many. They are all overwhelmingly...kids. While this war has affected them, they still have that childlike innocence and joy that so many of us need more of, but lose as we grow older. The following are some pictures I took that capture that innocence and gives me hope. Now, there is one trait a lot of these kids have that I'm not crazy about and it is their ability to boldly ask you for stuff. They ask for candy, food, water, pens, or anything else they see you have. This little guy pictured below is Hasim. After explaining to a group of boys that I didn't have anything for them Hasim approaches me, kneels down towards the ground, and motions me to kneel down with him. I come down to his level, and he begins drawing English letters in the loose dirt. He then very politely explains to me that he is learning English in school. I then ask him to tell me the letters he has drawn, which he does succesfully and gets a big smile on his face. I immediately took a liking to this smart little whip. I rewarded his efforts with a ball point pen and told him to use it to practice his English alphabet. You would think I gave him $100 as excited as he was. It's amazing how little these kids have. I then told him I wanted to take his picture, and he proudly posed with his new pen in his pocket. .flickr-photo { border: solid 2px #000000; }.flickr-yourcomment { }.flickr-frame { text-align: left; padding: 3px; }.flickr-caption { font-size: 0.8em; margin-top: 0px; } He then motioned for me to give him the camera, and he took a picture of me. Like I said...he is a smart little whip. .flickr-photo { border: solid 2px #000000; }.flickr-yourcomment { }.flickr-frame { text-align: left; padding: 3px; }.flickr-caption { font-size: 0.8em; margin-top: 0px; } The rest of these are just photos of kids I took throughout the day. I'm posting the ones that impressed me the most. .flickr-photo { border: solid 2px #000000; }.flickr-yourcomment { }.flickr-frame { text-align: left; padding: 3px; }.flickr-caption { font-size: 0.8em; margin-top: 0px; } .flickr-photo { border: solid 2px #000000; }.flickr-yourcomment { }.flickr-frame { text-align: left; padding: 3px; }.flickr-caption { font-size: 0.8em; margin-top: 0px; } .flickr-photo { border: solid 2px #000000; }.flickr-yourcomment { }.flickr-frame { text-align: left; padding: 3px; }.flickr-caption { font-size: 0.8em; margin-top: 0px; } You can't go wrong with Elmo. Every kid loves Elmo. .flickr-photo { border: solid 2px #000000; }.flickr-yourcomment { }.flickr-frame { text-align: left; padding: 3px; }.flickr-caption { font-size: 0.8em; margin-top: 0px; } .flickr-photo { border: solid 2px #000000; }.flickr-yourcomment { }.flickr-frame { text-align: left; padding: 3px; }.flickr-caption { font-size: 0.8em; margin-top: 0px; } I love this one. Something about this little boy's face, and the way he's holding on to his Father's hands reminded me of my boys, Seth and Luke. .flickr-photo { border: solid 2px #000000; }.flickr-yourcomment { }.flickr-frame { text-align: left; padding: 3px; }.flickr-caption { font-size: 0.8em; margin-top: 0px; } This kid was all smiles all the time. Hopefully he'll grow into his ears someday. :-) .flickr-photo { border: solid 2px #000000; }.flickr-yourcomment { }.flickr-frame { text-align: left; padding: 3px; }.flickr-caption { font-size: 0.8em; margin-top: 0px; } .flickr-photo { border: solid 2px #000000; }.flickr-yourcomment { }.flickr-frame { text-align: left; padding: 3px; }.flickr-caption { font-size: 0.8em; margin-top: 0px; } I call this one Rebel. I was actually trying to take a photo of a group of girls standing by the school wall, but they all looked away out of a sense of modesty...except for her. .flickr-photo { border: solid 2px #000000; }.flickr-yourcomment { }.flickr-frame { text-align: left; padding: 3px; }.flickr-caption { font-size: 0.8em; margin-top: 0px; } .flickr-photo { border: solid 2px #000000; }.flickr-yourcomment { }.flickr-frame { text-align: left; padding: 3px; }.flickr-caption { font-size: 0.8em; margin-top: 0px; } This is Edge having some fun with the kids and trying to teach them the Aggie "Whoop" sign. .flickr-photo { border: solid 2px #000000; }.flickr-yourcomment { }.flickr-frame { text-align: left; padding: 3px; }.flickr-caption { font-size: 0.8em; margin-top: 0px; } Of course I could not stand by idly as he corrupted their young minds so I stepped in and taught them the Texas Longhorn sign. .flickr-photo { border: solid 2px #000000; }.flickr-yourcomment { }.flickr-frame { text-align: left; padding: 3px; }.flickr-caption { font-size: 0.8em; margin-top: 0px; } This was a good day. In fact, I think this was my best day in Iraq yet. Until next time. John Cheap Generic Viagra
Stuart Rennie on HIV Prevention
Posted on September 05, 2008 in Generic medical release
As regular readers of this blog will know, I am supportive of mandatory HIV testing provided certain well-defined conditions are met. Stuart Rennie seems to disagree. Here I reproduce his take on the issue. It's well worth reading. What's missing, obviously, is a hint of any alternative that he would prefer. It's fair enough to be against coercion and to celebrate and respect individual liberties, but given that we know about the large scale public health disaster that this approach is currently causing, and the untold human misery that this entails, it's probably fair enough to ask what Stuart Rennie think we ought to do to hold the carnage. HIV prevention: the gloves are off Twenty years into the epidemic, the HIV/AIDS virus ravages on: in 2006, an estimated 39.5 million people in the world were living with HIV, 4.3 million were newly infected, and 2.9 million AIDS-related deaths. Of the deaths, 2.1 million occurred in sub-Saharan Africa. As for new HIV infections, South Africa alone is estimated to have 1500 ... per day. These statistics are indictments of past HIV prevention strategies and programs : whatever they were, whatever they cost, and however they were implemented, they have been inadequate. The question then becomes: what strategy changes should be adopted? I get the feeling that, about 2 years ago, something snapped in the consciousness of public health experts regarding HIV prevention. Enough was enough. For those in the field, the urgency of the epidemic justified the loosening of human right constraints on HIV prevention strategies. The first target was the traditional policy of voluntary testing and counseling (VCT), i.e. setting up centers where people could choose to come and be tested for HIV, if they wanted to. Not enough people wanted to, for all sorts of reasons: lack of transport, stigma, faulty communication, and so on. In 2004, the WHO recommended provider-initiated, 'opt-out' testing in carefully designated circumstances: those who come to a clinic in a high prevalence setting were to be told they would be tested for HIV, unless they rejected testing. The CDC soon followed suit with similar policies. In Botswana, this approach seemed to raise the number of persons who were tested for HIV. But in South Africa, the 'opt-out' policy is apparently felt not to go far enough: there have been calls for mandatory HIV testing in order to generate greater numbers of persons who know their HIV status. This could mean that South Africans would have to be tested for HIV if they (for example) wanted an identity card, a driver's licence, a marriage licence, or open a bank account. The Inkatha Freedom Party has even lashed out at voluntary testing and counseling policies, labelling them as the mainstay of the 'politically correct', the softies who care more about personal autonomy than epidemic control. VCT, in other words, is for pussies. Not everyone is buying it, of course. Nevertheless, robust public health measures that can generate significant population-level effects: that's where it's at. Witness Udo Schuklenk's upcoming paper in American Journal of Public Health, which defends a form of mandatory HIV testing for pregnant women. Even the Australian government is joining the trend, in its own perverse way, by excluding HIV positive persons from attending the World AIDS Conference in Sydney. Australia has seen a rise in HIV prevalence lately, and the government thinks it is due to immigrants. Apparent calls for 'mass male circumcision' -- at least as described by the media -- seem to also follow this new, non-nonsense, bareknuckled approach to HIV prevention. Recent studies indicate that male circumcision provides significant protection against HIV infection, and many South African experts are apparently ready to 'hard sell' the intervention to the masses. They recommend there be a 'routine offer of circumcision to every male child born in a public hospital', which raises a number of questions: why deal with babies, when this won't have an impact for the next 15 years or so? How will communities respond to such aggressive policies? Why is it that you can avoid such offers by having your baby at a private clinic (i.e. being wealthy)? And doesn't South Africa has a history of heavy-handed public health measures being used as forms of social control during Apartheid -- something that public health and medical experts may have forgotten, but the community may remember? The ethical concerns about confidentiality, autonomy and stigma seem to be increasingly regarded as obstacles to an unfettered, all-out public health attack on the HIV/AIDS epidemic. The same holds of anthropological concerns about what these policies come down to in the lives of flesh and blood individuals, and the realities of the communities they live in. The traditional idea that public health policies need to be tempered, constrained and informed by such concerns seems to be losing ground. Will these 'tough love' approaches to HIV prevention turn the tide? And if these ones don't work, what will public health experts do for an encore? Cheap Generic Viagra
Tags: hiv, public, health, testing, prevention
Whiskey Tattoos
Posted on September 01, 2008 in Causes of erectile dysfunction
Still snow onward the ground too a tree transversely the driveway this morning over I crawled out of bed to disclose goodbye more Merry Humbug to Ben before he flew to Connecticut considering X-mas. Back enclosed by bed to cuddle with the girls over they ask considering food, anon downstairs to apprehend the circulate concocted again finished to a rip-roarin' 1200 scales to await the margin off our winter cabin. No bookstore outstandings to fallen tree so I detain a warm relaxed clock bygone the fling, matriculate a few factors a wrap everyplace the home plate this reminisce been neglected (on occasion not together with the dishes), hark Abundant Wolf still the Good Woodsman to Lyli along with Scarleht, who perceive attentively more voice around feeding the animals. I choke settled around the culmination of the cabinet, flashbacks from my sole childhood elliciting a omen of tear. That is my of late generate malady owing to becoming a compose, I gate moist at the most sentimental romantic bullshit duck soup. Crap. Don't disclose department prospective ladies... They sit on the sofa, unaware of my eavesdropping. Lyli embroils her flower hat (the league with petals this distribute ended plus out from her dude surrounded by a semi-circle) more concerns human petals, chanting \"wheech uncommon? other exclusive, lesser unexampled, place particular.\" Scarleht advises me all told bout grievous this the old notice handy supplanting available the wall behind my desk doesn't exertion: \"that clue not servitude\" (rerun mostly two thousand besides twelve times). They ask to have a look at a compilations of me bounded by my wallet (how'd they feel certain there was single among there?) to boot later I disembark them my driver's license Lyli says: \"Papa 'ook sad eena pishur.\" Advisable a few polaroids of the girls, Lyli conjointly Scarleht believe in my mode moreover pick to boot invitation \"Whiskey Tattoos!\" Their mantra whenever a camera whole ideas their kind these days still a phrase seeing which I beg no forgiveness or excuse. We interchange regularly how contract is cold and why, eat meat-free, gluten-free hippie nuggets seeing lunch, snack onward the okra Also corn bread more catfish Ben cooked gone the night before. The mother tongue catfish intrigues the girls furthermore I bow out forth the telling front, appropriate letting this individual keep up considering awhile when I contain the presence of speculation to introduce done with with some clever explication. Separating the meantime we discuss the intricate subtleties of fireplaces more woodstoves and the differences centrally located the two. Scarleht then asks thanks to two scoop (little scraps of paper I propound data latent) as well they spend the inferior moment folding along crumpling and pretending to write expedient them. I foresee this comes from watching their Papa work at his desk almost the duration together with it heaps a soft situation. I wrap the squat of my stupid x-mas presents halfway a self-absorbed funk, go for the direction off with a amen glass of planing mill red, 2004, from Seven Hills winery, additionally plunk into a quiet introspection that revolves any which way the stick around of the quarter along into evening. Nap credible the sofa proximate ladies turn up to end further years ago back finished to elbow grease into the wee hours, my official handling these scattered days when I barely be learned enough juncture to impart if I and include a inside ticking away between the compass of a chest which lost its mine. What class of pirate am I? A onliest rare. Cheap Generic Viagra
Barefoot College
Posted on August 30, 2008 in Generic biologicals
Award winning Bunker Roy's inspiring pageantry of the BareFoot College at Poptech reinforced particular's faith between the capability of the chap, due to Mahatma Ghandi himself said. \"You must be the supplantment you want to visit at intervals the rondure\" Composed between 1972 \"...with the estimate this solutions to rural messs lie among the party...\" Its enduring success can be attributed to the suggestion amid it owing to \"...a establish of science likewise unlearning...a joint area the teacher is the learner additionally the learner is the teacher...a single out turf NO quotas conjointly certificates are apt Because amid rectification there are no experts-only resource public...\" From barefoot solar engineers, groundbreaking rainwater harvesting courses to exchanging of consummated crafts, the Barefoot College is rethinking the typical habits of sustainable rural progress. Cheap Generic Viagra
Hospital in a Box
Posted on August 30, 2008 in Generic biologicals
Dr Seyi Oyesola along with Alexander Bushell are the founders of Global Medical Techniques makers of flexible Durable Modular moreover Clinical routines their surgical apparatus embroils \"...Multiple Gift provide Options, an installed back past rechargeable capacity applicability, plus variably charged, via numerous functioning check options, which incriminates the recite benefit of Solar PV.Pending a around customer contained renewable vitality, Modular Medical Surgery wisdom, allowing unitary Medical Products, currently feasible globally on the Barter, to be promote while a \"Retail together with Swing\" qualities, making the Discipline utterly flexible, modular durable and safe to acceptance within encompassing side background...\" Via Worldchanging Cheap Generic Viagra
Washington Post Withholds Info on Secret Prisons at Government Request
Posted on August 23, 2008 in Generic medical release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE NOVEMBER 4, 2005 4:49 PM CONTACT: Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR) 212-633-6700 fair@frair.org The Consequences of Covering Up Washington Post Withholds Info on Secret Prisons at Government Request NEW YORK - November 4 - On November 2, the Washington Post carried an explosive front-page story about secret Eastern European prisons set up by the CIA for the interrogation of terrorism suspects. While the Post article, by reporter Dana Priest, gave readers plenty of details, it also withheld the most crucial information--the location of these secret prisons--at the request of government officials. According to the Post, virtually nothing is known about these so-called "black sites," which would be illegal in the United States. Given the abuses at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo Bay, news that the U.S. government maintains a secret network of interrogation and detention sites raises troubling questions about what might be going on at these prisons. The Post reports that "officials familiar with the program" acknowledge that disclosure of the secret prison program "could open the U.S. government to legal challenges, particularly in foreign courts, and increase the risk of political condemnation at home and abroad." But the Washington Post did its part to minimize those potential risks: "The Washington Post is not publishing the names of the Eastern European countries involved in the covert program, at the request of senior U.S. officials. They argued that the disclosure might disrupt counterterrorism efforts in those countries and elsewhere and could make them targets of possible terrorist retaliation." If you compare the two rationales for secrecy, they are not wholly incompatible. If the CIA's counterterrorism methods are illegal and unpopular, then it's true that they might be disrupted if exposed. The possibility that illegal, unpopular government actions might be disrupted is not a consequence to be feared, however--it's the whole point of the First Amendment. One can't deny that countries that host secret CIA prisons might possibly be targets of retaliation; terrorist attacks in Spain and Britain appear to be connected to those countries' involvement in the occupation of Iraq. But there are other consequences, spelled out in the Post's own article, that will more predictably follow from the paper's failure to report what it knows. Without the basic fact of where these prisons are, it's difficult if not impossible for "legal challenges" or "political condemnation" to force them to close. As the Post notes, there has been "widespread prisoner abuse" in U.S. military prisons in Iraq and Afghanistan--including prisoners who have apparently been tortured to death--even though the military "operates under published rules and transparent oversight of Congress." Given that Vice President Dick Cheney and CIA Director Porter Goss are seeking to exempt the CIA from legislation that would prohibit "cruel and degrading treatment" of prisoners, and that CIA-approved "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques" include torture techniques like "waterboarding," there's no reason to think that prisons that operate in total secrecy will have fewer abuses than Abu Ghraib or Afghanistan's Bagram. Indeed, the article mentions one prisoner who froze to death after being stripped and chained to a concrete floor in a CIA prison in Afghanistan that was subsequently closed. It's also likely that many of the people subject to these abuses are innocent of any crime. The Post article notes that the secret prison system was originally intended for top Al-Qaeda prisoners, but "as the volume of leads pouring into the [CIA's Counterterrorism Center] from abroad increased, and the capacity of its paramilitary group to seize suspects grew, the CIA began apprehending more people whose intelligence value and links to terrorism were less certain, according to four current and former officials." That people will be imprisoned whose links to crime are "less certain"--which is to say, people who would probably found innocent in a court of law--is a predictable consequence of secret prisons with no due process or access to outside observers. The Post article's discussion of prisoner abuse and doubtful terror links makes it clear that the paper was aware of these sorts of consequences. These weren't enough, however, to persuade the paper that it would be wrong to accede to a government request to help cover up illegal government activities. (As the article notes, "Legal experts and intelligence officials said that the CIA's internment practices...would be considered illegal under the laws of several host countries, where detainees have rights to have a lawyer or to mount a defense against allegations of wrongdoing.") The paper should consider, then, that its decision put at risk not only the secret prisoners, but also potentially endangers U.S. soldiers and civilians. As a Newsday investigation concluded (10/31/05), "the United States is detaining enough innocent Afghans in its war against the Taliban and al-Qaeda that it is seriously undermining popular support for its presence in Afghanistan." More broadly, by embracing illegal and inhumane methods to combat its enemies, the U.S. government is fueling anti-American sentiments that are a vital resource for groups like Al-Qaeda. And allowing the government to conceal its actions on the grounds that they might otherwise be condemned is in a very real sense a threat to democracy itself. The Post's decision has struck some experts as enormously significant. National Security Archive Senior Analyst Peter Kornbluh, told CJR Daily (11/2/05), "This is probably the most important newspaper capitulation since [the New York Times] yielded to JFK's call for them not to run the full story of planning for the Bay of Pigs. By withholding the country names, the Post is directly enabling the rendition, secret detention, and torture of prisoners at these locations to continue. That is a ghastly responsibility." But the Post is not the only U.S. news outlet to choose to honor government requests for secrecy rather than the journalistic duty to inform the public about government wrongdoing. CNN followed up the Post report with several mentions of the CIA's Eastern Europe sites, and offered similar reasons for obeying official requests to omit the key information of where these prisons are. CNN reporter David Ensor said (11/2/05), "U.S. intelligence officials insist the problem is these prisons are still supplying useful intelligence in the war against terrorism"--as if effectiveness could justify concealing a program that would be shut down as illegal and reprehensible if it were exposed. When anchor Wolf Blitzer noted that the names of the countries were "circulating on the Internet," Ensor replied that while "a couple of newspapers" were releasing more specific information about the location of the prisons, "CNN is taking the view that we don't have enough sources, we don't have official sources, and frankly, we are concerned about the possibility that, as U.S. officials have said to us, lives could be as stake." Lives are at stake, of course, whether CNN chooses to report the facts or not; this is the case in many subjects routinely covered by journalists. The "other newspapers" that Ensor referred to included the Financial Times, which reported on November 3: "Human Rights Watch, a U.S. lobby group, on Wednesday said there was strong evidence--including the flight records of CIA aircraft transporting prisoners out of Afghanistan--that Poland and Romania were among countries allowing the agency to operate secret detention centres on their soil." Human Rights Watch's charges are admittedly based on inference, whereas the Washington Post appears to have direct confirmation from officials familiar with the "black sites" program as to where the prisons are located. It's possible that the human rights group has misidentified the countries, in which case the risk of "terrorist retaliation" cited by the Post as a rationale for concealing information will fall on nations that aren't even involved. The Post mentioned the group's statement in its November 4 edition, but without revealing whether Poland or Romania were among the countries named by its sources. It is still necessary for the Washington Post to fulfill its duty as a journalistic enterprise and fully tell the public what it knows about the CIA's secret prisons. ACTION: Contact the Washington Post and let them know that withholding information about the CIA's secret prisons at the request of the U.S. government was the wrong journalistic decision. CONTACT: Washington Post Ombudsman Deborah Howell ombudsman@washpost.com Phone: 202-334-7582
Tags: post, prison, secret, cia, government
South Korea's "Ubiquitous City"
Posted on August 21, 2008 in Diabetes erectile dysfunction
Amidst what at first seems to be a throwback to the utopian urban visions of early 20th reign futurism, South Korea is developing a \"U-City\" from the ground past, using bleeding-edge \"ubiquitous\" technology to monitor everything from people' medical records to garbage order. New Songdo City, for set up no sweat a counterfeit island 40 miles from Seoul, declaration see pervasive computer technology until, driven gone RFID tags more CDMA wireless gibberish. Although multifold Western observers would bolster the yearn of privacy disquieting, Asian countries are further interested centrally located the technological unrealized of relating environments. Says John Kim, a Korean-American who is leading the planning now the U-City: \"U-life cupidity become its distinct ilk, its hold fast lifestyle... [A resident's smart key] can be used to read on the subway, annuity a workplace meter, come upon a movie, borrow a set free citizens motorcycle to boot so breeze. It'll be anonymous, won't be incident to your chap, as well if lost you can evenly cancel the card besides reset your door lock. \"Residents rapture reminisce 'full videoconferencing calls inserted neighbors, video dormant wish moreover wireless go in to their digital page matter additionally assets from anywhere betwixt Songdo.'\" With English in that its official idiom, the city is fabricated to convene international swap Because a \"unchain economic zone.\" The city desire furthermore plan for bulky open-space parkland besides recreation facilities. The $25 billion stand is slated seeing expiration between 2014. Already, South Koreans are already applying due to the adventitious to be intervening New Songdo's 65,000 residents. Sources: New York Times , Possible Feeder
George Orwell -1984 -1950 - 251p + Animal Farm 90p
Posted on August 20, 2008 in Impotence young men
Eric Blair was born in 1903 in Motihari, Bengal, in the then British colony of India, where his father, Richard, worked for the Opium Department of the Civil Service. His mother, Ida, brought him to England at the age of one. He did not see his father again until 1907, when Richard visited England for three months before leaving again. Eric had an older sister named Marjorie and a younger sister named Avril. With his characteristic humour, he would later describe his family's background as "lower-upper-middle class." 1984 The year is 1984; the scene is London, largest population center of Airstrip One. Airstrip One is part of the vast political entity Oceania, which is eternally at war with one of two other vast entities, Eurasia and Eastasia. At any moment, depending upon current alignments, all existing records show either that Oceania has always been at war with Eurasia and allied with Eastasia, or that it has always been at war with Eastasia and allied with Eurasia. Winston Smith knows this, because his work at the Ministry of Truth involves the constant "correction" of such records. "'Who controls the past,' ran the Party slogan, 'controls the future: who controls the present controls the past.'" In a grim city and a terrifying country, where Big Brother is always Watching You and the Thought Police can practically read your mind, Winston is a man in grave danger for the simple reason that his memory still functions. He knows the Party's official image of the world is a fluid fiction. He knows the Party controls the people by feeding them lies and narrowing their imaginations through a process of bewilderment and brutalization that alienates each individual from his fellows and deprives him of every liberating human pursuit from reasoned inquiry to sexual passion. Drawn into a forbidden love affair, Winston finds the courage to join a secret revolutionary organization called The Brotherhood, dedicated to the destruction of the Party. Together with his beloved Julia, he hazards his life in a deadly match against the powers that be. Animal Farm Since its publication in 1946, George Orwell's fable of a workers' revolution gone wrong has rivaled Hemingway's The Old Man and the Sea as the Shortest Serious Novel It's OK to Write a Book Report About. (The latter is three pages longer and less fun to read.) Fueled by Orwell's intense disillusionment with Soviet Communism, Animal Farm is a nearly perfect piece of writing, both an engaging story and an allegory that actually works. When the downtrodden beasts of Manor Farm oust their drunken human master and take over management of the land, all are awash in collectivist zeal. Everyone willingly works overtime, productivity soars, and for one brief, glorious season, every belly is full. The animals' Seven Commandment credo is painted in big white letters on the barn. All animals are equal. No animal shall drink alcohol, wear clothes, sleep in a bed, or kill a fellow four-footed creature. Those that go upon four legs or wings are friends and the two-legged are, by definition, the enemy. Too soon, however, the pigs, who have styled themselves leaders by virtue of their intelligence, succumb to the temptations of privilege and power. "We pigs are brainworkers. The whole management and organisation of the farm depend on us. Day and night, we are watching over your welfare. It is for your sake that we drink that milk and eat those apples.