Archive

Archive for July, 2010

Breaking News: Queen of England asked to answer charges of missing children, residential school deaths – please circulate

July 5th, 2010 No comments

The Demand has some spelling errors ( ‘thesen’ should be ‘these’,'holes’ should be ‘homes’ & ‘recieving’ ‘receiving’.) Whispers Wind has passed on; who is replacing him to follow through with this? I have heard zip from the GG or MSM. Have you heard anything from QE, the GG? I am Bccing this to some1 with the request he fwd it to Wapo Pisew/Lester Howse, whose ltr to Lizarbreath was efficacious re the rtn of his territory to its rightful Assini Watchi owners. I will also contact various media & activists. Was this printed in any BC paper? Red Wire mag?



Cuba Participates in Continental Meeting of Audit Institutions

July 5th, 2010 No comments

acnnews 6 Cuba Participates in Continental Meeting of Audit Institutions

HAVANA, Cuba, Jul 5 (acn) Cuba’s Vice President and General Comptroller Gladys Bejerano will participate in the Ordinary General Assembly of the Organization of Latin American and Caribbean Supreme Audit Institutions (OLACEFS) that begins on Monday in Guatemala. Prensa Latina news agency reports that the technical sessions of the event will begin on Tuesday. The first session will be chaired by the Cuban official and it will take place under the theme “Hierarchization of the State’s Comptrolling Role. Exchange on the Best Practices.” The event will take place through Saturday and participants will discuss topics aiming at the development and improvement of regional audit institutions.

economy/ef/10:20

Participa Cuba en Asamblea fiscal continental en Guatemala

Cuban News Agency www.cubanews.ain.cu ainnews@ain.cu

Guillermo Fariñas, a Life Saved by Cuban Medicine

July 5th, 2010 No comments

acnnews 5 Guillermo Fariñas, a Life Saved by Cuban Medicine

Interview with Dr. Armando Caballero, chief of the Intensive Care Unit at the Arnaldo Milián University Hospital in Santa Clara, on the health condition of patient Guillermo Fariñas

By Deisy Francis Mexidor

Science, humanism, professionalism and the most advanced and costliest treatments have been used to save the life of patient Guillermo Fariñas. Science because sophisticated treatments have been applied in his case; humanism and professionalism because giving back health to human beings is the top aspiration of the prestigious specialists who are caring for him; and the most advanced and costliest treatments because the Cuban government has spared no effort to ensure this person the latest generation medications, the same used in other well-known healthcare centers, many of which must be bought from other countries. On March 11, Fariñas was admitted to the Intensive Care Unit of the Arnaldo Milian University Hospital in the city of Santa Clara. The voluntary fasting he started more than 120 days ago has now become a threat to his life. To inquire about his health, we traveled to the healthcare center in the central Cuban province and interviewed Dr. Armando Caballero, chief of the Intensive Care Services in the hospital.

First, we wanted to hear from this experienced Second Degree Specialist and founder of that special unit, how is it possible for a person to survive four months of fasting.

“Everybody is asking that,” he said, “because a person can’t live that long without nourishment; but that is not the case of Fariñas.” Dr. Caballero explains that “this patient refuses to take food orally. He has been in this situation for 125 days, since he says he had spent two weeks in his house without eating before he was admitted to our services, where he has spent 110 days. On admission to the hospital, he showed some physical deterioration. He was conscious and he agreed that we provide him parenteral nourishment, that is, intravenously. The patient is receiving amino acids that make up the proteins required by the body. He is also provided lipids, vitamins and minerals, “everything necessary in a balanced diet for any human being,” the doctor says. Then he adds that “Fariñas’ weight was 63 kg when he was admitted to our services, and at this moment it moves between 67 and 69 kilograms. He has recovered body weight during his hospital stay and this is due precisely to the parenteral nourishment he is receiving.”

How compromised is the patient’s health at this moment?

Parenteral nourishment requires that certain (osmolar) nutrients of high molecular weight pass through the central ducts of the human body. I mean, you need to catheterize major veins of the upper part of the body such as the subclavians and the internal jugulars, which can be hazardous and lead to complications, particularly when hyperosmolar nutrients, like amino acids and hypertonic dextrose, must pass through these catheters. The risk of blood infections increases as time passes and the patients continue receiving this kind of nourishment. The tendency is for contamination and infection with bacteria and fungi or they develop other complications like we see in this patient now.

But, are these complications related to medical procedures or the care provided to this patient?

Absolutely not. These complications are a common occurrence in patients receiving this kind of nourishment. For example, in the 110 days that Fariñas has been our patient, we have had to change the catheter ten times. During his 251 days of fasting in 2006 –when he was also treated in our unit— he required 37 catheters. In my 37 years of experience in intensive care services, I never had another patient who required this procedure so many times. In this case, four timely-detected infections were successfully treated with the corresponding medications for the type of staphylococcus that develops in the blood. In very instance, the germ was immediately isolated and efficiently combated with antibiotics and other specific measures. But, from last week, the patient has developed another complication, which is not only an infection but something more serious. This time it’s thrombus phlebitis of the jugular-subclavian component in the neck veins. This thrombus or clot is very dangerous because it could detach and move toward the heart and from there to the lungs giving rise to a deadly pulmonary thromboembolism. Such health condition is a relatively common occurrence in the hospitals and one of the causes of sudden death, when the thrombi are large. But sometimes they do not detach and can be dissolved with antibiotics and anti-clotting medications like we are applying to this patient. This time again, we have isolated the germ that caused the phlebitis of the central veins, which in this case is associated to the presence of the venous thrombus in the jugular-subclavian segment. From last Sunday until today we have seen a slight improvement although we can’t say for sure that a more serious complication has been averted. No one can say here or anywhere in the world whether or not that thrombus will detach. We have all the necessary medications. Last Saturday, when the complication was detected and the pathology confirmed with cutting-edge technology, we discuss collectively the diagnosis and treatment.

Is this the limit of what medicine can do in trying to save the life of this patient?

This is an extreme situation, mostly at this point. Since our patient-doctor relations are very good, we have discussed with him at length about abandoning his voluntary fasting and starting to take food orally in order to recover the energy he needs to fight the temperature caused by the infection. It’s almost impossible to feed him through another catheter because new complications could arise when one is already developing. In his case, taking food is a crucial element in his fight for life.

What could happen if Fariñas insists on this behavior?

We feel that his condition could worsen, particularly the nutritional aspect, although until now we have been able to keep him stable despite his refusal to take nourishment orally.

And, what if he decided to eat?

The patient is perfectly prepared to take food orally. There is no contraindication in this regard. Simply his wish could be a major medical factor in the solution of his health condition.

What is the established medical procedure to deal with a patient who has decided not to ingest food?

As I said before, in my 37 years of experience in intensive care I have seen almost 20,000 patients, but Fariñas is the only one I’ve had here twice for voluntarily refusing to take food orally for a long period of time. This is not common. I’ve seen many patients in this unit; I’ve even treated persons who had tried to commit suicide for a certain reason, but at the end most want to live. That is what the doctors in this ward are asking Fariñas: that he helps us to save his life. As to your question, there are no rules, but there is medical ethics. And, one of its basic principles is autonomy, that is, not to apply any procedure without the patient’s consent. We abide by that principle. Fariñas is a patient who is conscious of his situation. He is not disoriented, he is in full command of his mental faculties, therefore, it is his right to accept or not, of his own volition, the application of any medical procedure. In my view, it is the wrong right a person has to kill him or herself. I have said to Fariñas that he is acting against his own physical integrity. A doctor’s mission is to save lives; however, in a case like this we must respect the patient’s will. We can’t go against his will unless he is unconscious and his close family approves.

Could you offer more details about the care provided to Guillermo Fariñas?

This person, like every other patient here, is privileged. He is accompanied by a relative around the clock. He has a TV set where he is watching the Football World Cup, which he likes. He also has a direct telephone line, the same as every other patient in this ward. Beyond what medicine can do, these amenities are important to the spirituality of the patient. The intensive care services are expensive worldwide. Thanks to our healthcare system, Fariñas, like every other Cuban who requires these services, is not paying a penny. I’ve had the opportunity of working in other countries, both in underdeveloped and developed nations. I spent one and a half year in France and I could see how costly it is to keep a patient in an intensive care unit. It’s very expensive.

And, what can you tell me about the medical expertise, the equipment available and the additional tests he has had?

At this moment, the entire team of the intensive care unit is available to him. These are ten specialist doctors, half of them Second Degree Specialists in Intensive and Emergency Medicine. They are all working with Fariñas. Every day we meet and discuss his case, his condition and evolution, what to do and what may be needed in order to get it.

You have just said “what may be needed in order to get it,” and I ask you, to get it where, in this country or in other countries?

Here and in other countries. We have bought medicines for this and other cases because many medicines we need to buy from other countries. For instance, all of the parenteral nutrients that Fariñas receives –amino acids, lipids, vitamins and trace elements—are coming from Europe. Cuba buys them not only for this patient but for other Cubans who need it. However, Fariñas is the only one that requires them because he refuses to eat.

Do you have an idea of how much the treatment provided to this patient is costing the country?

It’s practically impossible to compare the costs in Cuba with any other place. Cuban medicine is perhaps the cheapest in the world and probably the most efficient because healthcare services are not designed for profit. What I can tell you for sure is that, in any developed country, one day in an intensive care unit costs no less than $1,300, and this does not include complementary tests and medicines. In this case, we are talking of 110 days in the unit and over 300 lab tests. For example, we check this patient’s glycemia almost on a daily basis; 96 tests until today. We have already treated him for four serious bacterial vascular infections which have required such antibiotics as vancomicyn, ciprofloxacin, gentamicyn and rocephyn. We have practiced 66 ionograms to measure electrolytes in blood and correct any imbalance. We calculate his 24-hours urea almost every day to assess the nitrogen used by his body and ensure an adequate balance. We constantly monitor his system to prevent imbalances. This is what has enabled Fariñas to have a rather acceptable nutritional condition after 125 days of fasting, although the danger persists because this is not physiological, eating is. This patient has had electrocardiograms, X-rays, ultrasounds, and multi-slice tomographies. We have conducted all the necessary studies.

You said before that the doctor-patient relation has been good. How would you describe the doctor-family relation?

I’ve talked to his mother, his wife and an uncle, as well as to some of his friends. There is a good doctor-patient relation that makes practically everything possible but eating. That is our constant request. In sum, I think Fariñas’ and his family’s relation with the team of doctors and nurses in our services has been good. For as long as he has been here, I have not received any complains about the way he is treated. On the contrary, he always speaks of the professionalism of the doctors and he says he doesn’t want to go anywhere, although he says he has received offers to treat him abroad. However, he says he won’t go because here are the people who have saved his life. He trusts our healthcare services.

How do you describe Guillermo Fariñas’ condition at this moment?

Today, the patient faces a potential danger of dying. It depends on the evolution of that thrombus located in the jugular-subclavian left confluent, for which he is being adequately treated. I wish it dissolved; that would make it one more complication solved by our team of doctors and nurses. We shall continue doing our best to preserve his life.

Cuban News Agency www.cubanews.ain.cu ainnews@ain.cu

Pastors for Peace Friendshipment Caravan Begins Tour around Canada and the US

July 5th, 2010 No comments

acnnews 4 Pastors for Peace Friendshipment Caravan Begins Tour around Canada and the US

HAVANA, Cuba, Jul 5 (acn) The 21st United States-Cuba Friendshipment Caravan began its tour around 130 cities in the United States, Canada and Mexico to denounce Washington’s almost 50-year-old economic blockade of the island. According to the website of the Interreligious Foundation for Community Organization – IFCO/Pastors for Peace, the caravan will travel in school buses, trucks and cars along 13 different routes, visiting 130 US and Canadian cities where they will educate people about the US economic blockade of the island while collecting construction supplies and tools, medical supplies and equipment, educational and cultural supplies, to be donated to Cuba. Some of the Canadian cities included in the tour are Calgary, Vancouver, Ottawa, Regina, Kingston, Winnipeg, Toronto and British Columbia. Then, in the United States, they will visit cities in the states of Washington, Minnesota, North Dakota, Massachusetts and Oregon, among others. “From Texas we will travel to Cuba via Mexico, without asking for or accepting a US government license, as a disciplined collective challenge to the blockade and travel ban, and as ambassadors for a ‘people-to-people’ foreign policy based in mutual respect. When we return to the US, we will proudly declare our travel to Cuba and our opposition to the immoral blockade,” a text in the IFCO/Pastors for Peace website reads. “It is the time to completely end the blockade, the travel ban, and all the measures aimed at starving the Cuban people into submission and overthrowing their government. Our US/Cuba Friendshipment Caravan is one of our ways of demonstrating that we will no longer tolerate this cruel blockade,” the note reads. The members of the Caravan will also denounce the case of the five Cuban antiterrorists who remain unjustly imprisoned in the United States since 1998 for monitoring anti-Cuba groups in South Florida that were planning and carrying out terrorist actions against the island.

Worldnews/ef/09:37

Pastores por la Paz inician recorrido contra bloqueo a Cuba

Cuban News Agency www.cubanews.ain.cu ainnews@ain.cu

Haitian President Ends Visit to Cuba

July 5th, 2010 No comments

acnnews 3 Haitian President Ends Visit to Cuba

HAVANA, Cuba, Jul 5 (acn) Haitian President Rene Preval concluded on Sunday a working visit to Havana to analyze the implementation of Cuban programs of assistance in Haiti. Preval was seen off at the Jose Marti International Airport by the vice president of the Cuban Council of State, Esteban Lazo, and by Deputy Foreign Minister Rogelio Sierra. During his stay in Havana, the Haitian leader participated in a working meeting with Lazo in which Cuban and Haitian ministers and officials discussed bilateral cooperation in sectors such as education, public health, agriculture, fishing and sugar production, among others. Before leaving Cuba, Preval expressed his satisfaction with the meetings and with the current level of bilateral cooperation. He asked Lazo to pass on greetings and his gratitude to the Cuban people and to Fidel and Raul Castro.

Cubanews/ef/09:15

Presidente de Haití concluyó visita a Cuba

Cuban News Agency www.cubanews.ain.cu ainnews@ain.cu

Categories: Uncategorized Tags: , , , ,

Opens News Service for Monday, July 5, 2010

July 5th, 2010 No comments

acnnews 1 The Cuban News Agency opens its English news service for this Monday, July 5, 2010

Cuban News Agency www.cubanews.ain.cu ainnews@ain.cu

Categories: Uncategorized Tags: , , , ,

Latest Reserch of HonyBee.

July 5th, 2010 No comments

Regards.,

WAQAR SHAFI

Categories: Uncategorized Tags: , ,

1023~*Dil Main Tumara Piyar*~Pak Old…

July 5th, 2010 No comments

1023~*Dil Main Tumara Piyar*~Pak Old…

Dil main tumara piyar hay aise Payal main jhankaar ho jaise Soch k tuj ko man lahrae Sansoon main mahkaar ho jaise Ben tere mahsos ho muj ko Suna sab sansaar ho jaise Tere ane se lagta hay Ayi aik bahar ho jaise “Haider”aik tujhi ko chaye Baki sab bekaar ho jaise

(Her)ontdek Internet Explorer 8! Vertrouwd eenvoudig.

Categories: Uncategorized Tags: , , , ,

Kagan For Supreme Court

July 5th, 2010 4 comments

That would be the point. Thats the dem paradigm.

BTW, can you name the last solicitor general who was nominated to the court? No googling

On Jul 3, 6:16 pm, gtbdave wrote:

Categories: International Tags: , ,

Outrage: Wounded Warriors Taxed by ObamaCare

July 5th, 2010 No comments

[image: Click here to find out more!]What would one expect from Obama, a non-serving Muslim, Marxist coward and his circle of similar ilk.

Wounded warriors taxed by ObamaCare for prosthetic, medical devices

July 4, 9:45 AM[image: http://image.examiner.com/img/greydot.gif]Jim Kouri

[image: Purple Heart heroes will be taxed on their artificial limbs and devices that help them survive.]

Purple Heart heroes will be taxed on their artificial limbs and devices that help them survive.

*”You will not see your taxes increased a single dime.” – President Barack Obama*

*”[W]e have to pass the bill so you can find out what is in it, away from the fog of the controversy.” – Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi.*

As the nation celebrates Independence Day with parades and barbecues, America’s veterans face a new tax on prosthetic limbs and other vital medical devices.

The health care overhaul passed by Congress and signed into law by President Barack Obama earlier this year contains a new tax on medical devices such as prosthetic limbs, pacemakers, and wheelchairs. This tax, which its proponents claim will raise $20 billion over the next ten years, contains no exemption for the nation’s 22 million veterans. In fact, Senate Democrats specifically refused to exempt veterans from the tax., according to officials from the non-partisan, public interest group Americans for Tax Reform

“Did Americans forget President Obama promising that Americans making less than $250,000.00 per year would not see their taxes go up one cent? Once again a politician is caught lying to the voters,” said political strategist Mike Baker.

On March 24 2010, Senate Democrats rejected an amendment offered by Senator Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) to the healthcare bill. This amendment (SA 3644) would have prevented the medical device tax from hitting veterans covered by the Veterans Healthcare Program or TRICARE for Life.

This amendment was rejected by a vote of 44-54. All but five Democrat senators voted in favor of retaining the tax for veterans.

The medical device tax was one of over twenty new or higher taxes in President Barack Obama’s healthcare overhaul. This permanent new tax is already being collected by the federal government.

“On March 24, Senate Democrats had the opportunity to exempt our veterans from Obamacare’s new tax on medical devices such as prosthetic limbs. But 54 Democrats voted against the measure. They chose to side with the tax-and-spend crowd in Washington over our wounded warriors,” said Grover Norquist, president of Americans for Tax Reform.

“This is one of the many reasons Harry Reid and the Democrats did not want Americans to read the 2,500 page health care bill before it was passed,” Norquist added.

In addition to those who served in Afghanistan and Iraq, the Department of Veterans Affairs reports the following number of veterans from America’s wars:

World War II: 2,079,000 Korean War: 2,507,000 Vietnam War: 7,569,000 Desert Shield/Storm: 2,254,000

The following senators voted for the tax:

Daniel Akaka (D-HI) Max Baucus (D-MT) Evan Bayh (D-IN) Mark Begich (D-AK) Michael Bennet (D-CO) Jeff Bingaman (D-NM) Barbara Boxer (D-CA) Sherrod Brown (D-OH) Roland Burris (D-IL) Maria Cantwell (D-WA) Ben Cardin (D-MD) Tom Carper (D-DE) Bob Casey (D-PA) Kent Conrad (D-ND) Chris Dodd (D-CT) Byron Dorgan (D-ND) Richard Durbin (D-IL) Russ Feingold (D-WI) Diane Feinstein (D-CA) Al Franken (D-MN) Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) Tom Harkin (D-IA) Daniel Inouye (D-HI) Tim Johnson (D-SD) Edward Kaufman (D-DE) John Kerry (D-MA) Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) Herb Kohl (D-WI) Mary Landrieu (D-LA) Frank Lautenberg (D-NJ) Pat Leahy (D-VT) Carl Levin (D-MI) Joe Lieberman (ID-CT) Blanche Lincoln (D-AR) Claire McCaskill (D-MO) Bob Menendez (D-NJ) Jeff Merkley (D-OR) Barbara Mikulski (D-MD) Patty Murray (D-WA) Ben Nelson (D-FL) Mark Pryor (D-AR) Jack Reed (D-RI) Harry Reid (D-NV) Jay Rockefeller (D-WV) Bernie Sanders (I-VT) Chuck Schumer (D-NY) Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH) Arlen Specter (D-PA) Debbie Stabenow (D-MI) Mark Udall (D-CO) Tom Udall (D-NM) Mark Warner (D-VA) Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) Ron Wyden (D-OR)

*Jim Kouri, CPP is currently fifth vice-president of the National Association of Chiefs of Police and he’s a columnist for The Examiner ( examiner.com) and New Media Alliance (thenma.org). In addition, he’s a blogger for the Cheyenne, Wyoming Fox News Radio affiliate KGAB ( www.kgab.com). Kouri also serves as political advisor for Emmy and Golden Globe winning actor Michael Moriarty.

He’s former chief at a New York City housing project in Washington Heights nicknamed “Crack City” by reporters covering the drug war in the 1980s. In addition, he served as director of public safety at a New Jersey university and director of security for several major organizations. He’s also served on the National Drug Task Force and trained police and security officers throughout the country. Kouri writes for many police and security magazines including Chief of Police, Police Times, The Narc Officer and others. He’s a news writer and columnist for AmericanDaily.Com, MensNewsDaily.Com, MichNews.Com, and he’s syndicated by AXcessNews.Com. Kouri appears regularly as on-air commentator for over 100 TV and radio news and talk shows including Fox News Channel, Oprah, McLaughlin Report, CNN Headline News, MTV, etc. *