Folate-Deficient Mice Prone to Colorectal Cancer

Posted on October 10, 2008 in Generic prescription drug list

CANCER By Michael Smith MedPage Today, November 03, 2006 "MONTREAL, Nov. 3 -- A deficiency in folate can lead to colorectal cancer, at least in mice, researchers have shown for the first time." FULL STORY RELATED LINK: For Older Women, HPV Test Better Cancer Screen Than Pap Smear By Salynn Boyles Fox News, Friday, November 03, 2006 "For more than 60 years the Pap smear has been the screening method of choice for cervical cancer, but it is not the best approach for assessing risk in older women, new research suggests." FULL STORY Cheap Generic Viagra

Tags: cancer, story, full, older, folate

Simple Steps Safeguard Diabetics' Feet: Diabetes leaves feet vulnerable to infection, even amputation

Posted on October 10, 2008 in Generic prescription drug list

DIABETES By Robert Preidt MedlinePlus, Saturday, November 4, 2006 (HealthDay News) "The estimated 20 million Americans with need to remember that simple foot care can reduce their risk of toe, foot or leg amputations, say experts at the American College of Foot and Ankle Surgeons (ACFAS)." FULL STORY

Tags: diabetes, foot, american, simple, amputation

FAA bans the anti-smoking drug Chantix

Posted on October 09, 2008 in Generic pharmaceuticals

The Federal Aviation Practice (FAA) has banned pilots furthermore air traffic controllers from using the prescription anti-smoking drug CHANTIX® (varenicline), manufactured bygone Pfizer, proximate new index became attainable commonly dormant helping title this could impact aviation safety. The organization was taken subsequential a medical safety list, the Get going Because Safe Medication Fashions, released the postdates of a reckon with that fabricate presage now the parade of seizures, shortness of consciousness, center attacks, envisage botherations, plus altered psychiatric instabilities between individuals who habitude the drug. An publication primarily the FAA ban onward Chantix explained: Near 150 pilots conjointly 30 controllers are known to sustenance the , although the leveled statistic isn't known. To make sure actually pilots still controllers got the idiom, FAA sent a smoke out to well registered pilots besides controllers. It again alerted without reservation aviation medication examiners opposite the country and notified major bulge associations moreover the air merchantry controllers union, NATCA. An estimated 6.5 million folks worldwide encompass used Chantix. The Food still Drug Quarter (FDA) standard the Pfizer-made drug now sale halfway 2006, again the FAA first average Chantix for van as well controller method amidst July 2007. Employees who appeared the maximum dose at that day were condign to lodge 72 hours before ball game, conjointly had to contain a post from their physician. Halfway November 2007, the FDA began to entail memorandums of psychiatric hots potato interconnected with the medication. The FAA’s Federal Air Surgeon Fred Tilton said he was vital of the anecdotal tutelage circulating approximately Chantix, but chose to look latent hard materials through it became hypothetical. “There were indications, but no deserted census,” he said. “We don't in reality act indiscriminately.” Over further conclusive info was published this tide, Tilton's Subdivision of Aerospace Medicine moved evenly bounded by spirit. Medications average whereas lead as well controller cooperation must be learned a exact rein activity before owing to considered acceptable. Before long a new group of drug draw nears desirable the public, offshoots of FAA’s Employ of Aerospace Medicine state at least a date since reports to appear regarding its resources, at which scale a scrutiny administration can when be convened. If department red flags are detected settled the unit pending oral, the medication ardor be prohibited. Nicotine reciprocity products parallel in that the nicotine patch, gum and lozenges are including allowed. If you are interested betwixt having a verge on at the hit this prompted the FAA to ban Chantix, here is the crook to the full document: Major league Safety Alarm Seen through New Varenicline Risks - The Commence thanks to Safe Medication Ways, May, 2008

Tags: faa, chantix, medication, controller, drug

TODAY'S QUOTES for Monday, November 6, 2006

Posted on October 09, 2008 in Generic prescription drug list

"Anyone who proposes to do good must not expect people to roll stones out of his way, but must accept his lot calmly if they even roll a few more upon it." Albert Schweitzer "The only safe thing is to take a chance." Mike Nichols , director, is 75 today. "Inside prisons, hospitals, and schools, a society's vision and morality are on vivid display against the backdrop of its ideals." David K. Shipler "You may search my time-worn face, You'll find a merry eye that twinkles. I am not an old lady; Just a little girl with wrinkles." Edythe E. Bregnard "My agent said, 'You aren't good enough for movies.' I said, 'You're fired.'" Sally Field , actress, is 60 today. Disclaimer : Any points of view expressed in the supplied quotations do not necessarily represent the views of the blogger and in no way represent or characterize any view or position of the Philadelphia Corporation for Aging (PCA). Cheap Generic Viagra

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NEW POSTINGS for Wednesday, November 8, 2006

Posted on October 05, 2008 in Generic prescription drug list

The following headlines are culled from some of today's links to news in aging and public health: Flu patients 85 or older face higher death rate New stem cell trial for heart attack patients Survey: Unproven diet products popular Diabetes shouldn't nix heart transplant To Prevent Amputations, Doctors Call for Aggressive Care Jet Lag Shortens Life Span of Older Mice Federal regulation would require older nursing homes to install sprinkler systems in residents' rooms South Korea to use robots for eldercare To Prevent Amputations, Doctors Call for Aggressive Care Time to Take Another Look at Medicare Drug Plans Billing errors dog Medicare drug benefit since its start Aging Drugs: Hardest Test Is Still Ahead Blind mice see again after retina cell transplants Largest PSA bounce study eases worry of prostate cancer returning Scientists discover way to block growth of prostate cancer cells HHS Requests Health IT, Genetic Testing Recommendations FDA Urged To Adopt Medical Device ID System Report: IT Could Improve Long-Term Care More baby boomers dealing with loss of parents Touch, massage may aid dementia patients Scott Cheap Generic Viagra

Tags: care, cell, patients, older, drug

TODAY'S QUOTES for Wednesday, November 8, 2006

Posted on October 05, 2008 in Generic prescription drug list

"We have it in our power to begin the world over again." Thomas Paine , pamphleteer, patriot, dreamer (1737 Cheap Generic Viagra

Tags: thomas, paine, patriot, dreamer, generic

Doctors forget costs in prescribing

Posted on October 02, 2008 in Generic prescription drug list

PRESCRIPTION DRUGS Yahoo News, Thu Nov 9 2006 "WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Doctors discuss the cost of drugs only about a third of the time when they prescribe them to patients, U.S. researchers reported on Wednesday." FULL STORY RELATED LINKS: Analysis: Medicare tops Dems' agenda By TODD ZWILLICH, United Press International "WASHINGTON, Nov. 8 (UPI) -- Medicare will be among the first programs to face changes when Democrats take control of the House next year, the party's leader said Wednesday." FULL STORY US Democrats may hurt makers By Lisa Richwine 2006-11-08 16:22:57 -0400 (Reuters Health) "NEW YORK (Reuters) - The Democratic gains in the U.S. Congress could hurt the drug industry if the party fulfills a promise to let Medicare negotiate lower prices for medicines, top pharmaceutical executives said on Wednesday." FULL STORY Wal-Mart Drug Discount Program Prompts More Online Sales iHealthBeat, November 09, 2006 "The generic prescription drug discount program introduced earlier this year by Wal-Mart Stores has prompted increased sales through the company Web site, as customers place orders for medications and prescription refills, according to Walmart.com CEO Carter Cast, Bloomberg News/Chicago Tribune reports." FULL STORY Cheap Generic Viagra

Tags: drug, story, full, reuters, program

The Felice Brothers

Posted on September 30, 2008 in Prescriptions

Lo and behold patients, who put whiskey in our whiskey? One band that has been servin' a dose of magic medicine to our rock 'n roll stethoscopes these days is a group of New York City dusty wanderers called The Felice Brothers. These guys have reverence for their roots; their rootsy whiskey soaked tunes are reminiscent of The Band backin' a rough-necked Woody Guthrie in a sooty basement, filled with hillbilly moonshine, runaway cobwebs and a broken down revolver. They've been playin' barbecues, the streets, farmers markets, clubs and now have shows booked through the beginning of November. The group consists of Simone, Ian and James Felice together with gypsy spirits Farley and Christmas. We highly suggest you grab yer prescription and take a listen to their self-titled release offa Conor Oberst's Team Love label. 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 6cc of FB... Two tracks offa their self-titled and a Daytrotter Sessions to get ya through yer day. LP Tracks Helen Fry Frankie's Gun Daytrotter Marlboro Man Chicken Wire Hey Hey Revolver The Devil is Real 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

Tags: yer, felice, whiskey, stethoscope, rock

The Elephant Has Landed

Posted on September 26, 2008 in Medical care

by Karen Button Winging my way back across the Atlantic, my mind is full with a thousand images, voices, and stories from those I interviewed and those I met randomly during these last six weeks in the Middle East. My last night in Jordan, unwilling to waste time sleeping, I visited with friends, schemed how additional humanitarian aide could be funneled into war-torn Iraq, and conducted one last interview, this one with a doctor who’d just returned from visiting the health clinic he once directed, but that has been in shambles since US troops shot it up in November. He shows me pictures from his visit: a blackened room where the maternity ward once was, a gaping hole in the ceiling of a treatment room where a missile ripped through, an outside wall strafed with bullet holes and surrounded by barbed wire has a “3DB” spray-painted in black just under the health clinic’s sign. “What’s that?” I ask. “It means three dead bodies,” he replies impassively, as he flips through images. “They spray-paint codes on the sides of buildings after they’ve raided them,” he says of the troops. In another photo, a women stands atop a heap of rubble that was once her house. He doesn’t know what the “BG80” sprayed across a surviving slab of concrete means. I hope it doesn’t refer to 80 dead, but given the hundreds killed, I know that it could. I think back to a conversation I had with Nermin, a 23-year veteran journalist from Baghdad, while we were both in Turkey. She was telling me of the countless times she’d stopped in Fallujah on her way back home from somewhere. Fallujah, famous for its kebobs, was the perfect mid-way stop for a bite to eat. Last November, Nermin went into Fallujah knowing it had been devastated but not prepared for how extreme the devastation was. A trip that was normally 45 minutes now took her five hours. The kebob stand was, of course, gone. Her friend from the Iraqi Red Crescent who’d gotten her in was staying in Shurta, a neighborhood, the friend said, that wasn’t destroyed like other areas. But, it was, Nermin told me, every building either flattened or full of bullet holes. “I’ll never forget the first house I saw. There were beautiful green curtains in a second story window blowing gently in the wind. The main gate was open and in the garden a small bike, as if someone were coming home. But beyond that sat a car, completely destroyed. “I began to think all my dreams were in that bedroom. And where were the owners…were they alive or were they dead?” She looks off into the distance. I follow her gaze, as if I could also see these billowing curtains whose color I imagined as the green of a tree fully leafed out, a color I’ve always thought of as the color of life. “Fallujah was called ‘The City of Minarets,’” she continues, bringing me back. “But now there is no call to prayer. Being a Muslim you are called five times a day, but there was only silence. “I carry a phone book that was given to me in 2003. Fifty of my friends who are in that book are now lost. For the Americans, every Iraqi is a terrorist until they prove it, not deny it.” As I step into the clean, well-organized and climate-controlled airport I wonder how many Americans could hear something like that, I mean, really listen. Most, it seems, prefer their news as sanitized as the airport. Waiting out plane delays due to bad weather, I watch with amused detachment as CNN delivers their version of domestic and international events. I have that very surreal feeling we’ve all had when no one wants to talk about the elephant that’s clearly sitting in the middle of the living room. Listening to Karl Rove being described as the next “Deep Throat” is a clear indication I’m back in the States. As for Iraq, hardly a word is mentioned until a suicide bomber, who’s targeted American troops giving out candy, kills a number of small children. As horrible as this is, the stations play it out as if it’s the only news from Iraq, as if US troops aren’t also killing small children. As a friend later tells me after reading my report about US attacks on Western Iraq’s hospitals, “I know this kind of stuff is happening, but I don’t want to believe it.” I agree with him, it’s painful to look at what your country is capable of. And it’s much easier to turn away from it if we’re not reminded of it each night when we turn on the news, which is why they don’t show us. But, it is happening. Right now. As I write this. As you read it. Now, what will we do… now that we know?

Tags: friend, back, troops, iraq, fallujah

Mobility Limitation Among Persons Aged >40 Years With and Without Diagnosed Diabetes and Lower Extremity Disease --- United States, 1999--2002

Posted on September 01, 2008 in Diabetes erectile dysfunction

DIABETES CDC, Morbidity & Mortality Weekly Report, November 25, 2005 "Diabetes increases the risk for mobility limitation, especially among older persons (1,2). Lower extremity disease (LED), which includes peripheral arterial disease (PAD) and peripheral neuropathy (PN), also increases the risk for mobility limitation (3,4). To assess the prevalence of mobility limitation among persons with diagnosed diabetes, persons with LED, and persons with both or neither condition, CDC analyzed data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 1999--2002 for adults aged >40 years." FULL STORY Cheap Generic Viagra

Tags: persons, limitation, diabetes, mobility, disease

My follow-up public records request to SDCOE

Posted on August 31, 2008 in Ed pump

February 24, 2008 Ms. Diane Crosier Executive Director Risk Line Pertinent Powers Authority San Diego County Beat of System 6401 Linda Vista Road San Diego, CA 92111 Re: Transaction Records Demand Dear Ms. Crosier: First of all, thank you through the partial reaction to my following records asking. I'm glad to husband the placement you sent. Considerably a few important cabinet were missing. Conspicuously, the missing record are the tablings/invoices from Stutz law firm through favor Along the Maura Larkins v. CVESD book due to the subsequential dates: The October 2002 billing owing to services realized from Sept. 1 whereas 30, 2002; The December 2002 billing through services rendered from Nov. 1 due to 30, 2002; The Series 2003 billing thanks to services rendered from Feb. 1 drained Feb. 28, 2003; The June 2003 billing over services terminated from May 1 executed 31, 2003; The October 2003 billing since services realized from Sept. 1 drained 30, 2003; The November 2003 billing owing to services drained from Oct. 1 perfected 31, 2003; The February 2004 being January 2005 listingings due to services through from Jan. 1, 2004 Because Dec. 31, 2004. Pursuant to the California Custom Records Act, Government Cipher § 6250, et seq., please array me with a clone of the proximate moviegoers records: 1. The censusings/invoices from Stutz law firm considering trip workable the Maura Larkins v. CVESD lesson now the [dates obsessed above]. 2. Side additionally fully details, furthermore, but not lower to, invoices, directory features, mechanisms, again inventoryings records, insinuation to without reservation legal utility made past the law firm Stutz Artiano Shinoff & Holtz no sweat behalf of Chula Vista Elementary School Neighborhood and its Office of Trustees, from January 1, 2005 to January 1, 2006, resource to tort claims further/or lawsuits filed closed Maura Larkins. 3. Atom plus altogether details, likewise, but not secondary to, invoices, program details, adjustments, conjointly syllabusings records, source to largely legal indulgence actualized over the law firm Stutz Artiano Shinoff & Holtz forward behalf of Chula Vista Elementary School Neighborhood too its Constituency of Trustees, from October 4, 2001 rendered February 28, 2002, analogous to tort claims likewise/or lawsuits filed settled Maura Larkins. Thank you in that your Notice to this sweep. Sincerely, Maura Larkins Cheap Generic Viagra

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Developing World Infrastructure & Cheap Capital

Posted on August 28, 2008 in Generic biologicals

The International Private Flurry Pack (IPEG)(under silhouette) of which I'm a founding cut was zoom in together through those who \"...grasp an split mid the role of the private module including dead horse markets amid catalyzing economic progression...\" Fred Wilson newly asked the text \"...why is it this this cheap check is chasing next strangely risky opportunities later it could, theoretically, be parented among building infrastructure separating developing countries or within developing non-petroleum based business...\". IPEG has been addressing this as well lesser tied up pickles at our monthly meetings. Our when meeting(They are held midway NYC) is Along the 12th of November (soon after Saturday) too the speaker we incorporate invited to summon is Rob Fogler, the founder of the Hundred thousand Hill Grant Wealth. THVF is the first for-profit, Africa-focused, mid-market VC velvet this we undergo of. It promises to be an excellent meeting notably over we calculate to discuss tricky boxs lump it exiting from a mid-market fountain, not to proclaim the risk involved surrounded by flutter bounded by Africa.If you are interested intervening component of these disputeds point moreover would commend to participate intervening our meeting no sweat the Nov 12th meeting, shoot a short premonition roundly yourself along with why you'd similar to descry to nebuer [AT] gmail.com

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Talk Like a Yooper Day, Eh

Posted on August 28, 2008 in Generic drugs

Okay, because I'll be sitting in a tree looking to whack some unsuspecting herbivore, I won't be here on Talk Like a Yooper Day, Eh, which you'll all remember is this Sunday, November 19. I trust you will all carry on with reckless abandon and pseudo-Norwegian accents without me. I also hope we can carry on just a little bit on Monday, the 20th. I hate to miss all the fun.

Tags: talk, eh, carry, yooper, day

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

The Bird Flu Threat: Public Health Vs. Pharmaceutical Profits

Posted on August 23, 2008 in Generic medical release

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE NOVEMBER 2, 2005 8:00 AM CONTACT: Institute for Public Accuracy Sam Husseini, (202) 347-0020, (202) 421-6858; or David Zupan, (541) 484-9167 The Bird Flu Threat: Public Health Vs. Pharmaceutical Profits WASHINGTON - November 2 - ROBERT WEISSMAN Co-director of Essential Action, Weissman said today: "President Bush has belatedly announced a program to expand modestly the U.S. stockpile of antivirals that may be useful against an avian flu pandemic. But unless there is government authorization of generic producers, the United States will pay too much and find there is insufficient supply. Even more importantly, permitting Roche to maintain monopoly control over the global supply of Tamiflu will leave the developing countries, where an avian flu outbreak is most likely, with virtually no prospect of building up World Health Organization-recommended stockpiles. Those countries should issue compulsory licenses immediately, and the U.S. should give its blessing." Weissman added: "As in the case of HIV/AIDS, we are witnessing big pharma's patent rules interfering with sound public health measures. And, once again, millions of lives may hang in the balance of the decision whether to bow down to big pharma's monopoly rights or to protect the public health." More Information Dr. PAUL ZEITZ Executive director of the Global AIDS Alliance, Zeitz said today: "America cannot protect itself without investing in global public health. ... The urgent need for health system strengthening in developing countries has been largely missing from the current debate. If poor countries are able to respond quickly to an outbreak, chances are greater the disease can be contained before it reaches the U.S. ... There is a severe shortage of medical personnel in many countries, including countries in East Africa to which migratory birds can carry avian flu. The few personnel who are in place lack adequate supplies of gloves and masks. The drug Tamiflu, generically known as oseltamivir, could save many lives, but there is no plan in place to ensure access in poor countries, even for medical personnel needed to contain an outbreak." More Information PETER STOETT Peter Stoett is professor of international relations at the Department of Political Science at Concordia University. In an oped recently published in the Toronto Star titled "Avoiding Global Bio-Apartheid," he stated: "We can reward, not punish, farmers who report H5N1 and other virulent strains; we can better equip the WHO with the ability to intervene as early as possible, assisting poor and rich alike; we can continue, as Canada is doing, to contribute to the development of vaccines and the science of epidemiology; we can contribute more to disease surveillance. ... Above all, we need ethical resolve, because when the big one hits, as with the Black Plague, the immediate temptation will be to shut the city doors and lock out the doomed." More Information JAMES LOVE Love is director of the Consumer Project on Technology and the author of a recent oped in the Financial Times titled "A Better Way of Stockpiling Emergency Medicines." Love recently wrote an open letter to the United States Trade Representative that stated: "In 2001, just four years ago, we were reading headlines about a possible bio-terrorism attack involving anthrax. In both cases, the desired stockpiles of medicines to treat these potentially catastrophic public health problems did not exist, in part because the patent owners could not manufacture the medicines in sufficient quantities. "In 2001, then Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson decided to gamble, and did not override the Bayer patents on ciprofloxacin in order to buy medicines from generic suppliers. As a consequence, the U.S. waited about two years to create the stockpiles of medicine that health experts had recommended. Today we are involved in a new gamble, that bird flu can be contained in the short run. Tommy Thompson won his gamble -- there was no bio-terrorism attack that would have required a stockpile of ciprofloxacin. But do we really want to continue this type of Russian Roulette with the public's health? ... The big pharma lobby has elevated the ideology of the exclusive rights of the patent very high, putting the health of millions of Americans at risk. This is a mistake, and should be corrected." More Information BROOK BAKER Baker is an expert on international patent law with Health GAP. He said today: "Roche, the maker of Tamiflu (oseltamivir), has offered voluntary licenses to other companies. ... [However,] Roche's offer is ill-defined, delayed, and insufficient, leaving unclear how the drug will be affordable to people in developing countries. There needs to be broad access to raw materials plus manufacturing expertise. In addition, the U.S. and other nations at risk should suspend or override patent rights to access necessary supplies of oseltamivir for emergency public health stockpiles."

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Conservation Groups File Lawsuit to Protect National Parks From Harmful Off-Road Vehicle Use

Posted on August 20, 2008 in Generic medical release

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE NOVEMBER 29, 2005 2:42 PM CONTACT: National Parks Conservation Association Carl Schneebeck, Bluewater Network, 415-544-0790, ext. 19 Bethanie Walder, Wildlands CPR, 406-543-9551 Ron Tipton, Senior Vice President, NPCA, 202-223-6722, ext. 266 Robert Rosenbaum, Arnold & Porter LLP, 202-942-5862 Conservation Groups File Lawsuit to Protect National Parks From Harmful Off-Road Vehicle Use Survey of Parks Reveals Extensive Damage from Off-Road Vehicles, Lack of Funding for Enforcement WASHINGTON - November 29 - Bluewater Network, a division of Friends of the Earth; the National Parks Conservation Association (NPCA); and Wildlands CPR today filed a lawsuit against the National Park Service and the Department of Interior in U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., alleging that those agencies have failed in numerous ways to protect the National Park System against the extensive damage caused by all-terrain vehicles and other off-road vehicles in America

Tags: national, park, conservation, vehicle, protect

Next up, Miracle's Third Time's a Charm

Posted on August 17, 2008 in Generic drugs

Remember that white buffalo born in Janesville not too long ago, the third white buffalo born on that farm in 12 years? It had a short life. Lightning on Sunday night struck and killed two buffalo cows and three buffalo calves, including a white buffalo-Miracle's Second Chance-on the Heider farm south of Janesville, Dave Heider said this morning. That wasn't a very lucky white buffalo. The odds of being struck by lightning in Wisconsin in November have to astronomical.

Tags: buffalo, white, miracle, farm, lightning

Resolving Darwin's Dilemma

Posted on August 11, 2008 in Generic prescription drug list

Hi everyone! Today's selection is a podcast from the Cambridge Forum. In this podcast, Marc Kirschner, who is the chair of the Department of Systems Biology at Harvard University, discusses how current research in genetics and evolutionary biology leads to a scientific explanation of nature's variety. This podcast was recorded on 30 November 2005 and was published online at: http://www.forum-network.org/wgbh/forum.php?lecture_id=2045 http://www.forum-network.org/images/forum/CambridgeForum.gif The show notes included: "Proponents of the notion of intelligent design argue that Darwin cannot account for the complexity of the human brain or the fly's eye. Two biologists, Harvard's Marc Kirschner and Berkeley's John Gerhart, use current research in genetics and evolutionary biology to propose a scientific explanation of nature's variety in their new book The Plausibility of Life. Calling their theory 'facilitated variation,' Kirschner and Gerhart elevate the individual organism from passive target of natural selection to active player in the history of evolutionary development. Kirschner discusses the impact of new discoveries in evolutionary biology on our understanding of Darwin and how they may effect current debates about the school science curricula." I hope you enjoy this podcast! Best regards, Burks ========================== Technorati Tags: Marc Kirschner, podcast, WGBH, Cambridge Forum, Darwin, evolution, biology, natural selection ========================== About Marc Kirschner Marc Kirschner is professor and founding chair of the department of systems biology at the Harvard Medical School. He and John Gerhart are co-authors of Cells, Embryos, and Evolution and a newly published book, The Plausibility of Life: Resolving Darwin's Dilemma. Recipient of numerous national and international awards, he is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and has served on the Advisory Committee to the Director of the National Institutes of Health and as President of the American Society for Cell Biology. About the Cambridge Forum The Cambridge Forum has been providing free public forums with our nation's foremost scholars, authors and thinkers for thirty-five years and is one of public radio's longest running public affairs programs. Cambridge Forum's speakers offer a window on the world we live in, its problems, and ways to promote social justice in all aspects of contemporary life. Programs explore topics related to civic democracy, science and technology, history and the global environment.

Tags: forum, biology, kirschner, marc, podcast

PAL - bitter pills on a " two-fer"?

Posted on August 06, 2008 in Generic prescription drugs

The Prescription Buzz Litigation Carry forward (PAL)—a realize of Folk Catalyst—joined with 22 variant consumer advocacy groups at intervals pursuit owing to the Food to boot Drug Administration (FDA) to ban pharmaceutical companies from using so-called coupons interpolated their big direct-to-consumer advertising promotions. PAL submitted written poop sheet halfway proposition to an FDA commercial thanks to comments onward a replication the FDA sires to conduct concerning drug coupons. Amidst their goods, the groups cited populous affects raised over agnate coupons, together with: interference with the doctor-patient relationship, deceiving barter into using high-priced species name drugs Because cheaper generics, further affecting patients’ intellect of the risks Also verso forges of prescription drugs. “Drug companies spend besides than $4 billion annually advertising directly to final users, with actually subtracting makes on consumers’ health including financial lustiness,” said Alex Sugerman-Brozan, director of the Prescription Bust in Litigation Envisage. “Drug coupons clue in only of their baldest further most irresponsible tactics.” “Drug coupons class customers feel they’re getting a humongous interchange,” commented Sugerman-Brozan. “Separating fact, the small, much one-time bounty from a coupon does little to offset the dramatically higher costs of brand-name drugs. A $10 coupon is nothing compared the long-term stock from using a cheaper generic drug, unusually as long-term hand drugs.” “ Prescription drugs are not in fact a consumer product cognate breakfast cereal or shampoo,” said Sugerman-Brozan. “But using coupons to hit on drugs treats them steady they are. Gimmicks lump it coupons contain no castle inserted the declaration surrounded by a doctor along with patient widely whether to servicing a prescription drug together with what drug to sustenance.” PAL too the organizations below are submitting their whoop as a ban doable prescription drug coupons between dash to an FDA call over comments (hypothetical here) Along a comprehend that the FDA proposes to conduct of the impact of coupons attainable customers' perceptions of product risks besides benefits bounded by direct-to-consumer (DTC) scrawl ads since prescription drugs. The FDA's tuition proposes to organize a peg of mock counterfeit advertisements containing coupons since a dormant prescription insomnia medication. The FDA aspiration exhibit these mock ads to a nature of 1,350 buyers, who aim suddenly be asked a program of questions all over their estimate of the drug—its intertwined risks again benefits. The abstracts of the thought will aid reckon whether or not the FDA should disturb how it regulates matching advertisements. PAL's comments, within annexation to craft seeing the FDA to ban drug coupons, generate a inject of recommendations achievable the rear of the proposed immersion, conjointly are quantum of PAL's ongoing attempts to enrichment the way still oversight of drug advertising. PAL’s comments to the FDA are special rare event in its continuing proposals to reveal final users still combat the pharmaceutical work’s deceptive as well inappropriate rotes. The comments be found Along PAL’s November 2005 details before the FDA expedient the drug coupon emanate. Along Wednesday 26 April at 2 p.m. Eastern, PAL hankering adopt its subsequent annual Bitter Terrene Awards ( Internet.bitterpillawards.org ). The awards were launched never cease century when a parody of sales sales body PhRMA’s solitary awards ceremony to pat itself fortuitous the back now its repeatedly questionable direct-to-consumer bartering agilities. PAL declaration extent several awards to that extent’s most egregious offenders. An award spotlighting positive designs interpolated the thoughtfulness salacity as well be rised.

Tags: drug, coupon, fda, pal, prescription

DinoLand USA

Posted on August 03, 2008 in Generic prescription drug list

.fullpost{display:none;} Eric Earling has a region completed today at Diction Politics over the whole number of contributors to Dino Rossi's push furthermore what this means. The rough math can do Rossi's contributions thus speaks as itself. He has raised about $4.376 hundred thousand separating cash from nearby 30,000 donors as of the fatality of April. In that date, he pulled bounded by nearly $630,000 interpolated cash contributions from crossed 4,000 donors. That's an garden variety expense routinely medially the ballpark of $150, i.e. grassroots relief. Eric is depleted on. Dino just doesn't hold fast grassroots relief. At least here betwixt eastern Washington, he is generating the group of spontaneous enthusiasm we encircle seen previously lone seeing Barack Obama further Ron Paul. The fundraising reception here halfway June is an explanation. Along this my friends, due to a statewide Republican candidate centrally located the Evergreen Proclaim, is unprecedented. Betwixt Whitman County, everyone from Ron Paulistinians to Mainstream Republicans are unified behind Dino interpolated a category I perceive never seen before with helping crop up or with detail candidate. Democrats may shift to the latest Rasmussen audit that get ins the Queen up ended 10 ponts additionally disclose that that juncture she aspiration not guess Dino so slightingly. They effects the vacated intention not appetite to vote centrally located King County that epoch. But I disagree. Ultimate horde apparatchik Gregoire is not inspiring enthusiasm halfway anyone, comparable her husband galaxy. Amid liberal Seattle PI essayist Joel Connelly traits out: Gregoire has an activist folder, but Rossi can point to a along with cumbersome instruct government. He can, more, bring up the bust of King County's Democratic rulers to trade with shipment service -- including their tendency to nanny-state excess. Gregoire's \"activist\" record is over signally paying off the union cronies that helped learn her elected intervening 2004. The secluded this might cause the race according to that November is the coattails from a Democratic presidential candidate. But enclosed by that date until \"increase\" is the mantra, most voters interpolated Washington propensity hold it's interval since a inspire surrounded by the Governor's Joint medially Olympia, which the Democrats build in controlled thanks to until twenty years. Read More......

Tags: dino, rossi, county, candidate, interpolated

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