Guest guest Posted August 21, 2004 Report Share Posted August 21, 2004 > " WDDTY e-News " <e-news > WDDTY e-News Broadcast - 19 August 2004 > Fri, 20 Aug 2004 19:57:02 +0100 > WHAT DOCTORS DON#8217;T TELL YOU - E-NEWS BROADCAST No. 96 - 19 August 2004 Please feel free to email this broadcast to any friends you feel would appreciate receiving it. HAPPY HOLIDAYS: E-News is packing its bucket and spade for its annual holidays. We'll be back in a mailbox near you on 10 September. BACK TO PLAN B: Breakthrough cancer drug can kill It's been just a few short months since Avastin (bevacizumab) was being hailed as the great new breakthrough drug for cancer therapy. It's the first drug designed to inhibit angiogenesis, the process by which new blood vessels develop and carry vital nutrients to a tumour. In other words, the drug starves the tumour. The American drug agency, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), approved it in February as part of the treatment for cancer of the colon or rectum. But in just five months of use, doctors have discovered the drug can cause stroke, heart attacks and angina, and can also double the risk of a fatal thrombosis. Not that the drug was ever a day at the beach. When it was approved the FDA knew the drug could cause fatal stomach perforations, fatal hemorrhage, hypertension and congestive heart failure. These new concerns must make Avastin one of the untouchables, but the new discoveries raise concerns about the efficacy and reliability of the pre-licensing clinical trials that too often miss adverse reactions that could even kill the patient. It's not for the first time, when faced with these deadly therapies, that we've said we'd rather take our chances with the cancer. (Source: Food and Drug Administration website). * What really works in cancer treatment? Find out everything you need to know about cancer in the WDDTY definitive Cancer File. You get the track record on every major conventional and alternative treatment. To order your copy, : http://www.wddty.co.uk/shop/details.asp?product=404 PARKINSON'S: The forgotten drug Researchers are getting excited about a drug that used to be given to patients with early-stage Parkinson's, but which was suddenly dropped. The drug, selegiline, is in the family known as monoamine oxidase type B inhibitors that had been used since the 1980s to slow the progress of the disease. The University of Birmingham has rediscovered selegiline after reviewing its use and efficacy in 17 trials, which involved a total of 3,525 patients. Most patients showed improvements in mobility and general lifestyle activities compared with those on a placebo. Better yet, the drug is cheap and readily available. So why did it suddenly fall from fashion? Oh, it was something to do with a study in 1995 that found it killed 57 per cent of those taking it. MOBILE PHONE MASTS: Now our police are getting sick We can't help feeling that we're building a major health problem with our networks of mobile phone masts, and we fear the problem will worsen as the G3 masts start appearing. One example of this advanced technology is the Tetra mobile network, which is being introduced to all 53 of the UK's police forces. It is an advanced digital network that should be fully operational by next spring, at a cost of £2.9 billion to the UK government. As usual, the network has been introduced with all the standard scientific platitudes that it is perfectly safe. But early reports back 'from the field' suggest otherwise. Six people based at one police station in Norfolk have all reported sick with a debilitating health condition since a Tetra mast was installed just yards from them. The police staff has suffered bouts of dizziness and severe headaches, and it's been as bad for the 25 local residents who also happen to live near the mast. Repeated nose bleeds, disturbed sleep and skin problems, especially among the children, have been reported. The police staff has been warned not to make public their health concerns. A similar ban was imposed on one policeman, Neil Dring, who died from cancer of the oesophagus, which developed after he had been using his Tetra handset. These incidents are not isolated examples. Some reports suggest that hundreds of policemen and women have complained of deterioration in their health since Tetra was introduced in their area. (Source: Daily Telegraph, 14 August 2004). STATISTIC OF THE WEEK Nearly one in four doctors in the UK is mentally ill. A 12-year study has found that 22 per cent of doctors who participated were suffering from a basic mental disorder by the age of 30. Interestingly, researchers from University College London, who carried out the study, found that the doctors' neurotic tendencies were linked to their personalities rather than from work pressures. So people who are first mad then become doctors. . . (Source: The Times, 18 August 2004). NURSE, THE SCREENS: Hospitals are killing too many patients A hospital is no place to be if you're sick, and new studies just released confirm this view. A review of practices in hospitals in the UK has found that 850,000 errors occur every year, resulting in 40,000 deaths, although the rate could be as high as 72,000 deaths a year. This gloomy picture is just from those incidents that hospitals and staff admit to, and the situation could be many times worse. Overall, the figures suggest an error rate of 2.2 per cent, whereas other studies have reported rates from as high as 36 per cent. An Australian study, thought to be one of the most accurate and reliable yet produced, reported an error rate of 4.75 per cent, which, if so, would suggest that the situation in UK hospitals is twice as bad as that reported. The study doesn't reveal how the patients got into hospital in the first place, but a What Doctors Don't Tell You report estimated that up to 1.1 million Britons are admitted every year following an adverse reaction to a drug or medical therapy, or from a prescribing error. So once medicine has got you into a hospital bed, it has a pretty good chance of finishing you off. Not that the situation is any better in the USA. Around 195,000 patients die in an American hospital every year as the result of a medical error, one study has concluded. The health insurance group Healthgrades Inc produced the new figures, which double those reported by the Institute of Medicine in 1999. It was based on a review of 45 per cent of hospital admissions from 2000 to 2002, and includes failures to rescue dying patients and deaths from infection of low-risk patients, neither of which were included in the Institute of Medicine's report. In addition to the deaths, 1.14 million patients also suffered a 'safety incident', which represents one in four Medicare patients admitted from 2000 to 2002. (Sources: British Medical Journal, 2004; 329: 369. Reuters, 27 July 2004). * To search the WDDTY database - where every word from the last 14 years of research can be found #8211; click on http://www.wddty.co.uk/search/infodatabase.asp Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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