Monday, January 11, 2010
How was this racist? Not real smart but, not racist!
1/11/2010 07:21:00 PM | Posted by
Just Saying |
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Except for the foolishly spoken last ten words, it is obviously what a whole lot of people were thinking, poorly stated but not racist! Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has apologized for saying during the 2008 presidential campaign that Barack Obama could be elected because the country was ready for a “light-skinned” African-American president with “no Negro dialect, unless he wanted to have one.”
"When I say... " I am a Christian"
1/11/2010 07:09:00 PM | Posted by
Just Saying |
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"When I say... "I am a Christian"
I'm not shouting "I'm clean livin'."
I'm whispering "I was lost,
Now I'm found and forgiven."
When I say... "I am a Christian"
I don't speak of this with pride.
I'm confessing that I stumble
and need Christ to be my guide.
When I say... "I am a Christian"
I'm not trying to be strong.
I'm professing that I'm weak
And need His strength to carry on.
When I say. "I am a Christian"
I'm not bragging of success.
I'm admitting I have failed
And need God to clean my mess.
When I say... "I am a Christian"
I'm not claiming to be perfect,
My flaws are far too visible
But, God believes I am worth it.
When I say... "I am a Christian"
I still feel the sting of pain.
I have my share of heartaches
So I call upon His name.
When I say... "I am a Christian"
I'm not holier than thou,
I'm just a simple sinner
Who received God's good grace, somehow."
— Maya Angelou
Sooo many T.V. Ads for medications for depression
1/11/2010 06:30:00 PM | Posted by
Just Saying |
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If an individual personally believes he or she has a chemical balance, that is their right, and I defend their right.
However, when an enormous and profitable industry imposes an ideology of a "chemical imbalance"... when that industry is supported by taxpayer money and government authority... and when that ideology is pursued by the mental health system by excluding and trampling upon other beliefs...
... Then we have a right to ask a question:
The special domination of a "chemical imbalance" theory means there ought to be special proof, so where is the proof for a chemical imbalance?
If a licensed medical authority tells you that you have a chemical imbalance ask, "May I see the lab test results please?"
There are no lab test results. There's no brain scan, blood test, urine test to reveal complexities of the human mind.
The little we know about the mind is that it is an emergent process, and in fact is not in a strict "balance" in any case.
Medscape Medical News has written about a study that shows that many people are misinformed by ads about a chemical imbalance.
Medscape writes, "Advertisements in the U.S. for selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) are not based on science, according to an essay published in the December [2006] issue of the Public Library of Science (PLoS) Medicine. Since the 1960s, investigators have proposed the 'serotonin hypothesis,' which implicates low brain levels of serotonin in depression. However, extensive research to date has failed to confirm this theory."
Measured by dollar invested and dollar returned, the psychiatric pharmaceutical industry is one of the most consistently profitable in the history of the planet. This unchecked power has been used to mislead the public, a public that mistakenly believes its government is adequately regulating and monitoring the worst abuses of the drug industry.
How could anyone with medical training miss this? Easy, with both eyes shut and wallet open!
1/11/2010 10:28:00 AM | Posted by
Just Saying |
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I know of two so-called pain management clinics in Port Charlotte that patients (maybe clients or customers is a more accurate description) have regularly made their monthly visits in this condition. This could be observed just sitting in a car by the entrance of the offices.
Putting the focus on hunting down the sick and suffering addicts (who in a lot of cases had their addiction to pain killers started under the "care" of a unscrupulous M.D.) while these Doctors of Death run free to rake in the cash, living the good life, is a crime against humanity and at the heights of hypocrisy!
Charlotte Sun: Today's Top Story Sarasota County leads state in prescription drug deaths
1/11/2010 08:27:00 AM | Posted by
Just Saying |
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After reading the article below I am still stunned by the blindness to the obvious, these are *PRESCRIPTION DRUGS* THEY ARE BEING PRESCRIBED! BY WHOM? DOCTORS AND IN MIND BOGGLING MASS QUANTITIES!!! Complaisant, negligent or just plain greedy? Greed has to be the main reason "Doctors" will risk so much. On the other hand so very few get called out on it, I guess the ones who do over prescribe feel the odds are in their favor of not getting investigated and/or prosecuted. Negligent comes more into play with non-narcotic over-medicating ie psyc meds but, that is another topic.
Recently, it was announced that Sarasota County led the state in accidental prescription drug deaths for 2008.
To help reverse that trend, several Sarasota County substance abuse prevention groups are gathering data and comparing notes to reduce the prevalence of drug usage, drug-related deaths and hospitalizations -- in the area. They're starting with teens.
At a recent meeting of North Port's Community Health Action Team Alliance for Substance Abuse Prevention subcommittee, members talked about the need for a way to encourage local teens to stay drug-free.
"It goes back to ... prevention, intervention and enforcement," North Port Police Officer Sean Viara explained. "At no step is there not a way, and it's never a case of 'its too far gone.'"
Tom Davie, of First Step of Sarasota County, said the reasons for taking action are compelling.
"A lot of people drop through the cracks," he said. "Adults talk and it sounds a lot like Charlie Brown's teacher -- 'mwa mwa mwa' -- but there are kids who are dying...The hope and promise of their lives has stopped, and their parents and friends are grieving."
Viara said in talking about cigarettes, drugs and alcohol -- availability, affordability and acceptability matter.
"If you take away one of these three elements, it begins to crumble, and the other two don't make much sense," he said. "(NPPD) can continue to make arrests and shut down grow houses, but if you don't shut down acceptability, there's someone else willing to slide into that spot."
Several members of the ASAP group are also on the Sarasota County Behavioral Health Strategic Planning Work group. The group, composed of a number of agencies and individuals -- including meeting jointly with the pharmaceutical investigation division at the Sarasota County Sheriff's Office -- are compiling data on drug use and its effects on area residents.
Pam Meunier is the mental health and substance abuse policy coordinator for the Sarasota County Health Department. One of the resources the group is using to track drug use and its consequences is the 2008 state medical examiners report, from which Sarasota County data has been broken out specifically by County Epidemiologist Scott Pritchard.
"This is a real issue in the community," she said. "The number isn't as high with the kids, but it seems they're hanging onto that habit. It's unintentional in a lot of cases, but some do end up dying or in the hospital.
"According to the data, there were 73 unintentional poisoning (deaths), which is how they list it, in 2008," she said, adding the total for District 12 -- which includes all of Sarasota, Manatee and DeSoto counties -- was 282 people.
She continued that the majority of those District 12 deaths, as well as non-fatal unintentional drug poisonings, were most prevalent in those ages 20-24, but, Meunier said, "we can only assume that it's starting with the kids."
"The number of actual deaths due to unintentional poisonings -- say, the use of prescription medications at a party mixed together. They have no intention of committing suicide, but they end up dying," Davie said.
Meunier said, however, that the medical examiners report was only accurate as far as the number of people he sees, "which isn't everybody."
"We're just trying to get a handle on Sarasota County," she said, "and trying to drive some initiatives to make changes in the community. Data is flying all over the place, and there's a lot of exaggeration. Parents are hearing things, so there's a lot of hysteria information that comes out. But you appreciate the emotional impact it has on families."
In November, the Sheriff's Office announced that the county leads the state in the number of accidental prescription drug deaths, and that Florida is number one in the nation.
Accidental prescription drug deaths are the second leading cause of death in Sarasota County, according to Sheriff Tom Knight, who added that in 2009, sheriff's deputies responded to 32 accidental deaths related to illegal pharmaceutical drug usage.
"According to state statistics, Sarasota County has twice the state average of fatal overdoses," he said.
Statewide, the Medical Examiners 2009 Interim report stated that, from January to June 2009, there were 4,199 drug-related deaths, where drugs were either the cause or were present in the person's system. Prescription drugs account for 79 percent of all drug occurrences.
In terms of prescription drug abuse, the Charlotte County Health Department does not keep track of statistics on prescription drug abuse, according to Charlotte County Epidemiologist James Ogedegbe. But the medical examiners interim report stated that, from January to June 2009, there were 62 deaths in Charlotte County where prescription drugs were either the cause of death or present in the person's system.
Amity Chandler, with Drug Free Charlotte County, works with students. She said that by the time people start abusing prescription drugs, they've already been using other "gateway" drugs -- alcohol and marijuana.
"We're dealing with prevention, but once you get to prescription drugs, you're dealing with intervention," Chandler said.
Charlotte Behavioral Health Care in Punta Gorda operates a program for those struggling with prescription drug abuse. CEO Jay Glynn said the voluntary program, which is just over a year old, has already had 400 people come through, many who have been abusing oxycodone and other prescription medications.
"We're mostly seeing young adults who have been abusing this drug for a while, and they're running out of resources," he said. "They can't work, or they end up in crime and trying to figure out ways to get their drugs ... the program has 15 beds and they're all filled. It's mainly pain medications that we're seeing."
North Port averages about one accidental drug overdose death each month, according to Police Chief Terry Lewis.
Meunier was very complimentary of North Port, saying the community has "taking things by the horns, and they are just one passionate group."
The next ASAP meeting will take place at 6:30 p.m. Jan. 14 at the North Port Family Services Center. Sarasota County School Board member Caroline Zucker is scheduled to attend.
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