Guest guest Posted May 30, 2006 Report Share Posted May 30, 2006 "WC Douglass" <realhealthDaily Dose - Headin' for pharmageddon - by crook or hookSun, 28 May 2006 12:59:02 -0400 A Leader CrookedI've got a confession to make: I've been sitting on a big story formore than a month.I normally wouldn't do something like this, but in this case I justhad to. I wanted to see what the mainstream media would do about thisstory before I broke it in this forum. I hoped it would make headlinesfor weeks and cause ripples that would shake the very columns of thebrand-new Food and Drug Administration building...But since the story looks poorly on both the FDA leadership and on thepolitical machine which greases the corrupt agency's axles with shadyback-room deals, it caused no more than a momentary blip - nothingmore than barebones obligatory reporting so that the mainstream mediacan say it did its job.It's a shame, too. It's a blockbuster story. On with it...A New York Times investigative report from April 29th (picked up bythe AP and a few other news services and papers) claims that therecently resigned head of the FDA is being investigated criminally forfalse statements to Congress and for financial improprieties involvinga company overseen by the agency.According to the Associated Press report and other sources, former FDAhead Lester Crawford and his wife liquidated more than 50,000 sharesof personally held stock in companies directly regulated by the agency(drug companies, I assume) - stock they held for weeks even AFTERCrawford's confirmation last June. This constitutes a blatant conflictof interest, especially since Crawford had been acting head of theagency since mid-2004.Less than three months after his confirmation, Crawford suddenlystepped down from his post in September of 2005. One can only assumeit was due to the impending investigation into his finances.But this securities conflict isn't the only problem brewing for theformer FDA head. He's also accused, as part of a lawsuit against theFDA, of holding up the approval of the over-the-counter version of RU486 (the "morning after" birth control pill) for purely politicalreasons - remember, this is a Republican presidential administrationwith a fiercely pro-life stance...Regardless of how you feel about oral contraceptives or prescriptiondrugs in general (I've got some strong opinions on both these thingsmyself), this kind of interference in what's supposed to be anobjective approval process violates everything the Food and DrugAdministration is supposed to stand for. vTHAT'S what I was hoping would make national news.But what's even more disturbing than the alleged securities fraud ormanipulation of drug approvals (at least to me) is the politicalwheeling-and-dealing that got Crawford confirmed as FDA head to beginwith. You won't believe the details in the next Daily Dose...**************************************************A World HookedSpeaking of drug approvals, here are a few interesting tidbits aboutthe worldwide rise of pharmaceuticals from a recent Forbes.com article: * In 2005, prescription drug sales broke the $600 billion mark forthe first time in history - a leap of 7% over the year before. * Sales in the nine biggest markets (the U.S. included) grew by5.7%, while sales in developing nations like Russia, Mexico, China andSouth Korea averaged a blistering 81% growth year over year! * Approximately 2,300 purely experimental drugs are currentlybeing tested on humans worldwide, while 212 more are in late-stagehuman trials. * So-called "biotech" drugs (protein-based, injected) grew 17% tomore than $50 billion in sales.Think drugs are taking over medicine, or what?No wonder control of the FDA is such a pivotal advantage for eitherpolitical party. Holding the reins to the domestic approvals oftomorrow's prescription medications spells hundreds of billions ofdollars into the pockets of drug companies - and into the government'scoffers...Only one thing is missing: Any kind of objective oversight oraccountability.Welcome to the prelude of "pharmageddon."Thinking globally, acting vocally,William Campbell Douglass II, MD************************* "Our ideal is not the spirituality that withdraws from life but the conquest of life by the power of the spirit." - Aurobindo. Talk is cheap. Use Messenger to make PC-to-Phone calls. Great rates starting at 1¢/min. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 1, 2006 Report Share Posted June 1, 2006 We did it Part two. Not only did we create AIDS but we created circa 1970,s MRSA – All as related by an orthodox Director of Pharmacology. This “flesh eating bug “ as it has been nicknamed was first recognised in Australian Hospitals. As per the following item. DRUG RESISTANT germs spreading through Britain's Hospitals are being blamed ï·“ for the deaths of dozens of patients Doctors, are, alarmed because, the germ is resistant to virtually all common antibiotics. It has been identified in at least 32 London hospitals, and, outbreaks have occurred in Nottinghamshire, Yorkshire, and East Anglia. " Infected hospitals have had to close wards and intensive care units and isolate patients' who are carriers Dr. Richard Smith assistant editor of the " British. Medical Journal said the potential is frightening the Bacteria are' only susceptible to one antibiotic, vancomycin and could eventually become resistant to that too, " The strain the methicillin resistant staphylococcus a aureus, 'bacteria I (MRSA), known, as Super Staph " was First identified in an Essex hospital in 1981 Patients particularly at risk include the, elderly, those with open wounds, and people undergoing ï·“ transplant, surgery, heart operations and kidney dialysis. Complications caused by the infection are believed to have contributed to, at, least 30 deaths since, April. Dr Jean Bradley, chairman of working party, examining, the problem in the North East Thames Region said “ It, has caused deaths in people who were basically well before they came into hospital. They have had an operation and died from the infection. The germ, which usually lives harmlessly or up the nose, is easily spread from patient to patient on the hands of medical or nursing staff Although it is the same bacteria that often causes wounds to become infected, the dangerous, antibiotic resistant strain can lead to fatal blood poisoning as it fails to respond to ordinary treatment Scientists have' been warning for decades that overï·“use of antibiotics could lead, to the emergence of resistant strains A similar epidemic has been wreaking havoc in hospitals in Eastern Australia since the Iate, 1970s and has caused the deaths of hundreds of patients " . One new London hospital the Homerton in’ Hackney was` forced to set aside an entire ward for MRSA infected when it opened in July. Dr. Ken Grant district general manager for the City and. Hackney Health Authority said there was a significant increase in the number of people identified as carriers in. June and July .. We have been screening patients as they come in and, put carriers in a separate ward in the hope of 'eradicating the infection. Staff with the bacteria have, been I given antiï·“microbial shampoo and nasal spray' " Basically problems arise when: staff and patients move from one hospital to another. Virtually all the major London hospitals have been affected, greatly adding to the cost of treatment. Guidelines for the control of outbreak have been drawn up, by a working party of the Hospital Infection Society, and the British Society for Antimicrobial, Chemotherapy. . Its report warns:' Effective' treatment of, serious infections has often proved difficult. The antimicrobial agents available are, often potentially toxic, limited in number, difficult to administer and expensive. Isolationï·“ facilities are essential 'once an outbreak, ha & occurred.' The cost of an epidemic of MRSA is high and the onus should be on prevention rather than cure. Dr Paul Noone, consultant microbiologist at, the Royal. Free Hospital, North London, said: " Hand washing` is, probably the single most important step to take. But nurses have to work under intense pressure because of the cuts. Where people are overworked, ï·“these hygiene measures tend to go. .. The germ flourishes in hospitals because of the widespread use of antibiotics, which kill' competing bacteria and allow MRSA to, get a foothold. Experts have blamed the indiscriminate use of antibiotics for the, emergence, of resistant strains of bacteria, a phenomenon, first noticed. In the 1950s when some types of infection that could no longer be treated " with penicillin were, identified. .. There are a number of different strains of. Super Staph and all are vulnerable to treatment with vancomycin. Although other rarely used antibiotics can kill individual strains, treatment depends on rapid identification but doctors warn that all the remaining treatments are expensive and potentially toxic. They fear that if the bacteria also becomes resistant to vancomycm, medicine could be put back 50 years to the days when even minor infections could kill. Dr Ken Harvey. director of. Microbiology at the Royal Melbourne Hospital in Australia, where a particularly virulent strain of MRSA bacteria swept through the wards, said recently: 'We may, look back at the antibiotic era as just a passing phase in the history of medicine, an era in which a great, natural resource was squandered and where the bugs proved smarter than the scientists He is especially critical of 'doctors who constantly use broadï·“spectrum antibiotics an indiscriminate drug which kills a wide range of bugs in circumstances where they are unnecessary. “ Broadï·“spectrum, antibiotics, are the refuge of the diagnostically 'destituteâ€. he said. The British Medical Journal is shortly to publish advice to GPs and hospitals on the best, way to control outbreaks of MRSA. [Mrsa is also known as the “flesh-eating bugâ€] Latest reports on “Clostridium Dificile†[CD] indicate that modern drugs have created another ‘monster’ from an innocuous microorganism, by the use of Antibiotics. In addition to the above we have the “â€unsolvedâ€â€ cases of SID or “â€inexplicableâ€â€ cot deaths . Unsolved and inexplicable because the orthodox medicine field refuses to credit the evidence that these deaths are due to VACCINATION. Then of course there is the items you are all familiar with - the effects of the Mercury preparation included in VACCINES . These include AUTISM , ASTHMA and ECZEMA. It should be pointed out that Asthma – whilst it may have many irritants that cause an attack -- is a sign of a DEPLETED IMMUNE SYSTEM!!. While we are dealing with these matters it should be appreciated that the current wave of violence and indiscriminate attacks on the public by “mental†patients is due to the fact that Psychologists are NO LONGER following the wisdom of Jung , Freud and Adler. Putting in long laborious hours of hard work sorting out the problems of the mentally disturbed. Why take this hard labor on when the Psychotropic Drugs produced by the Pharmaceutical Industry and given a “Hard†sell to Doctors in the Psychology area .They can drug up the patients who go away and stop being a problem!!. The trouble is that these drugs –like ALL drugs – have “side effectsâ€. These side effects all resemble the problems suffered by the ELI LILLY drug “Halcion†which caused various patients to murder their closest relatives , one of whom was a police chief!. It was rapidly withdrawn. The salient fact is that when you suppress ANY symptom , it is similar to shutting down the safety valve on a pressure cooker . The pressure-problem goes some place else in the mind-body axis and creates fresh problems that only surface later . As the Medicine man will point out - this is a different problem and has nothing to do with the other problem I “cured†a year ago. If those words sound vaguely familiar I plead guilty to lifting them from the “Organum†of Sam Hahnemann!!. Who wrote them some 200 years ago!!! Does NOTHING EVER CHANGE??- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 2, 2006 Report Share Posted June 2, 2006 Big Pharm in trouble again From today's New York Times (link for those who can use it: http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/02/he...=2 & _r=1 & th & emc Drug for Bones Is Newly Linked to Jaw Disease By GINA KOLATA Published: June 2, 2006 In the last 10 years, millions of patients have taken a class of drugs that can prevent agonizing broken and deteriorating bones. The drugs once seemed perfectly safe and have transformed life for patients with cancer or osteoporosis. [Graphic removed: Top-Selling Bisphosphonates] But recently there have been reports of a serious side effect: death of areas of bone in the jaw. Everyone agrees that the condition, osteonecrosis of the jaw, is an uncommon complication, but that its true incidence is not known. It is estimated that among the 500,000 American cancer patients who take the drugs because their disease is affecting their bones, 1 to 10 percent may develop the problem. As for the millions of osteoporosis patients, who take lower doses, the condition seems less common. But no one knows how much less. Some oral surgeons have as many as a couple of dozen cases, but their clinics have become centers to which patients elsewhere are referred. Among people with osteoporosis, only 15 cases of the new ailment have been reported in the medical literature. So for now, doctors and dentists are perplexed. Firm data are scarce to nonexistent, studies that may provide answers are only about to begin, and medical organizations and drug companies are scrambling to provide guidance, often based only on hunches. Some dentists are refusing to treat patients taking the drugs, fearful that the dental work will induce a case of osteonecrosis, and lawyers are lining up to sue the drugs' makers, saying they failed to give patients adequate warning. Doctors say worried patients hearing about the ailment are starting to besiege them. The patients want to know whether they should stop taking the drugs, called bisphosphonates. They want to know whether they should shun invasive dental procedures, like tooth extractions and implants, which appear to set off the condition. They want to know whether osteonecrosis of the jaw can be treated and, if so, how likely it is that a person will recover. Some patients who have not developed osteonecrosis have decided to stop taking the drugs until more is known. " I'm giving myself a little holiday, " said Judy Langley, 63, of Anacortes, Wash., who because of osteoporosis has been taking a bisphosphonate for seven years. Doctors also say the level of alarm among patients, as well as some physicians and dentists, is itself alarming. " The whole thing has spun out of control, " said Dr. Ethel Siris, director of the Toni Stabile Osteoporosis Center at Columbia University. The Food and Drug Administration is aware of the issue, said Laura Alvey, a spokeswoman, and has required that all bisphosphonate labels disclose the link to osteonecrosis of the jaw. The problem is that patients cannot easily abandon the drugs. Cancer patients, mostly those with multiple myeloma and breast cancer whose disease has spread to their bones, generally take one of two bisphosphonates, Zometa or the older Aredia, intravenously. The drugs, doctors say, largely prevent excruciating bone pain and fragile bones that break like kindling. Osteoporosis patients, on the other hand, usually take bisphosphonates as pills, in much lower doses. Those drugs - Fosamax, Actonel and Boniva - reduce the risk of fractures of the spine or hip, injuries that can create a steady downward spiral in patients' condition. Even if patients stop taking the drugs, they are not free of them. Bisphosphonates remain in bone for years, and no one knows how long the osteonecrosis risk remains. Some doctors and dentists suggest stopping the drugs for a few months before and after an invasive dental procedure. Others say six months to a year may be better. As for what happened to patients who developed the condition, oral surgeons say some got better but many did not. It now appears that the best treatment is with antibiotic rinses; cutting away the dead bone just made things worse. So little is known, said Dr. Bruce L. Pihlstrom, acting director of the division of clinical research at the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research, that the most fundamental questions lack answers. The institute is starting studies, but for now " we have to be careful that we're not too alarmist about this, " Dr. Pihlstrom said. " We just don't have the information we need. " The story of bisphosphonates (pronounced bis-FOS-fo-nates) began in 2003 with a letter in The Journal of Oral Maxillofacial Surgery calling osteonecrosis of the jaw " a growing epidemic. " Its author, Dr. Robert E. Marx, chief of oral and maxillofacial surgery at the University of Miami, reported on 36 patients who had received intravenous bisphosphonates. All had " painful bone exposure, " as is typical with the condition, and " were unresponsive to surgical or medical treatments, " Dr. Marx wrote. " The common denominator, " he said in a telephone interview, " was that they all had cancer. Then we started looking at their treatment. The one common thread was bisphosphonates. " But not everyone was convinced. " My first reaction was that maybe there is an association but this wasn't enough, " said Dr. Regina Landesberg, an oral and maxillofacial surgeon at Columbia University. " I wanted to see more data. " Meanwhile, another oral and maxillofacial surgeon, Dr. Salvatore Ruggiero of Long Island Jewish Hospital, was gathering his own data. At first he saw patients with breast cancer or multiple myeloma who arrived with exposed bone in their mouths. " It looks like a piece of ivory with little tiny holes in it, " Dr. Ruggiero said. " The one drug they were all on was bisphosphonates. " He tried scraping away the dead bone and letting it heal, but that only made things worse. " We were creating a larger bone wound that didn't heal, " Dr. Ruggiero said. He called local cancer specialists, but " they said they did not have any experience with this kind of complication. " He contacted Novartis, which makes Zometa and Aredia, the intravenous drugs. " They had no record of the problem, " Dr. Ruggiero said. Dr. John A. Hohneker, vice president for oncology medical affairs and services at Novartis, said the company got its first patient report in December 2002. " We did a literature search looking for osteonecrosis of the jaw, " Dr. Hohneker said. " There are a lot of unknowns there. There really isn't even a consistent definition of what osteonecrosis of the jaw is, and the true incidence is unknown. " But as case reports began to trickle in, Novartis put a warning of the condition on the drugs' labels, even before the F.D.A. required it, and appointed an advisory board, which included Dr. Ruggiero. In the meantime, Dr. Ruggiero and others had noticed something new: osteoporosis patients taking bisphosphonate pills who had developed osteonecrosis of the jaw. In 2004, he published a report on 63 patients - 56 with cancer, the rest with osteoporosis. Still, the number of reported cases remains tiny. A recent article in The Annals of Internal Medicine reviews the published papers. They include reports of osteonecrosis in 388 cancer patients; 3 patients with Paget's disease, a degenerative bone disorder treated with oral bisphosphonates; and 15 with osteoporosis. The authors of that article, led by Dr. Sook-Bin Woo of the School of Dental Medicine at Harvard, estimated the risk for cancer patients taking intravenous drugs at 6 to 10 percent. The risk for osteoporosis patients, taking the lower doses, is unknown, they said. But Dr. Catherine H. Van Poznak, a breast cancer specialist at the University of Michigan, said it was very hard to get good estimates of risk from the sort of data, mostly case reports, that have been published so far. " The case definition in one report can be different from the case definition in another, " Dr. Van Poznak said. And not every case has been published or reported. " We've seen about 20 patients at Columbia, " Dr. Landesberg says. " But it's so impossible to get a handle on what the incidence is. You just don't know. " Lawyers, though, are advertising for plaintiffs and beginning to file suits. Novartis says it does not comment on litigation. Merck, which makes Fosamax, a bisphosphonate for osteoporosis, says 15 suits have been filed against it, while Roche, which makes Boniva, used for osteoporosis, reports none. Two suits have been filed against Procter & Gamble, which makes Actonel, for osteoporosis, and Didronel, for Paget's disease. All the companies say osteonecrosis never emerged in their clinical trials, involving tens of thousands of patients. As professional medical and dental societies formulate guidelines, scientists say that what they really need are some good studies, which are only about to begin, as to what advice is helpful. Drug holidays, for example. Should cancer patients stop taking bisphosphonates for a year or so and then start again? Should osteoporosis patients stop periodically? " The pharmaceutical industry has every desire that a patient who starts on a bisphosphonate would take it for life, " said Dr. Robert Gagel of the M. D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. " The bone community, of which I am a member, has always been a bit suspicious of that viewpoint. " Some patients say they are left unsure of the medical advice they have already been given. Joan McDevitt, 53, of Franklin, Me., took steroids for an eye problem, a treatment that may increase the risk of osteonecrosis. Then, with low bone density, she began taking an oral bisphosphonate. A year and a half later, this February, she had an infected tooth extracted. The hole would not heal, and pieces of bone from her jaw kept splintering and coming out. Her oral surgeon, Ms. McDevitt said, " cut into the jaw - he cut and filed the bone down. " It did not help. " I had horrible sores back there, " she said, " ungodly painful sores. I was in agony. I had never had anything like that in my life. " Ms. McDevitt is now no better. " I still can't eat on that side of my mouth, " she said. " The skin is really thin, and it's still sore. " Her oral surgeon never mentioned osteonecrosis, but her doctor's partner figured it out. She stopped taking the bisphosphonate. " Hopefully it will heal, " Ms. McDevitt said. " It's pretty scary. 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