People are urging donations for Harvey relief efforts — just not to the Red Cross

People are urging donations for Harvey relief efforts — just not to the Red Cross

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-nation/wp/2017/08/28/people-are-urging-donations-for-harvey-relief-efforts-just-not-to-the-red-cross/?utm_term=.32a5f7eb1d7c

With many ways to help the tens of thousands of people estimated to be temporarily displaced by surging floodwaters brought by Harvey, some are asking people to donate — but to be choosy about where they spend the money.

As former president Barack Obama — as well as celebrities and local leaders — encourage donations to the American Red Cross, others on social media are telling donors to give elsewhere, criticizing the leading disaster-relief organization for its response to recent natural disasters, particularly the 2010 earthquake in Haiti.

That sentiment has been shared in the past — following investigations by NPR and ProPublica, which revealed how the Red Cross bungled its response in Haiti.

“It’s heartbreaking because I know how seriously the Red Cross takes its responsibility,” Red Cross spokeswoman Bristel Minsker told The Washington Post about the continued backlash.

Minsker said Monday that when people donate to the Red Cross, the humanitarian organization “absolutely honors the intent of their donations” and makes sure the donations are spent wisely to provide people in need with safe shelter, hot meals and health care.

But not everyone agrees with that.

Houston Convention Center fills up quickly as displaced residents search for shelter after Harvey. (ASSOCIATED PRESS)

People were urging donors Monday to seek out churches and local organizations, saying, “Please don’t donate money to the Red Cross! Houston will never see it.”

“For the umpteenth time,” one person wrote, “don’t give red cross your money. Find grassroots efforts so people can actually get helped.”

“They don’t help and pocket majority of your money,” another said. “Very little if any goes to those that need it.”

“Any recs for where to donate to Harvey relief?” another person asked. “Red Cross is out but I don’t know which local charities are on the ground & doing good work.”

Over the weekend, Dan Gillmor, author and professor at Arizona State University’s Walter Cronkite School of Journalism, also advised people on Twitter not to give money to the organization.

The Red Cross said Sunday that it had set up 34 shelters in Texas, where the hurricane hit the Texas coast Friday, sending wind, rain and roaring floodwaters across parts of the state.

Minsker, the Red Cross spokeswoman in Austin, said some 6,000 people stayed in shelters on Sunday night and that the organization is prepared to house up to 30,000 estimated to be displaced by the storm because “many people aren’t going to have a home to go back to when the floodwaters subside.”

Asked how much money the Red Cross had raised so far for Harvey relief efforts, she said those figures are not yet available.

“The size of this disaster is so huge, we’ve been focused on providing immediate needs to people, especially shelters,” she said.

Brad Kieserman, who is coordinating disaster relief efforts in Texas for the Red Cross, said the destruction is “overwhelming.”

“The situation feels, I think, as well managed as any situation like this could be,” he told NPR on Monday. “I mean, the very definition of catastrophe is when the very capability and capacity you need to respond has been destroyed or deeply affected by the thing you’re responding to, and that’s what’s happened here. Everyone who is involved in this response is coordinating and cooperating, but it is overwhelming.”

Kieserman said Harvey has turned Southeast Texas into “an inland lake the size of Lake Michigan,” and the greatest challenge right now is that workers can’t get around because of the floodwaters.

Play Video 3:33
See Houston’s historic flooding from the air
 
This drone video taken Aug. 27 shows the historic flooding in Houston caused by Hurricane Harvey. (ahmed.gul/Instagram)

“This is, in my career, the most catastrophic event I have seen,” he said. “The hurricane came in. It brought all of these winds and storm surge and rain and now we’re going to deal with 50 inches of flooding, basically turning the entire southeast portion of the state into an inland lake. We’re going to deal with rivers out of their banks for weeks, massive destruction, structural damage to homes, and I think we’re going to have an incredible long-term housing challenge.”

As The Washington Post’s Peter Holley reported last year, a 2015 NPR and ProPublica investigation revealed that the Red Cross had only built six permanent homes in Haiti even though it had collected almost a half-billion dollars in donations. The year before, the news organizations published a report about Red Cross’s response to hurricanes Isaac and Sandy.

They reported:

After both storms, the charity’s problems left some victims in dire circumstances or vulnerable to harm, the organization’s internal assessments acknowledge. Handicapped victims “slept in their wheelchairs for days” because the charity had not secured proper cots. In one shelter, sex offenders were “all over including playing in children’s area” because Red Cross staff “didn’t know/follow procedures.”

According to interviews and documents, the Red Cross lacked basic supplies like food, blankets and batteries to distribute to victims in the days just after the storms. Sometimes, even when supplies were plentiful, they went to waste. In one case, the Red Cross had to throw out tens of thousands of meals because it couldn’t find the people who needed them.

The Red Cross marshaled an army of volunteers, but many were misdirected by the charity’s managers. Some were ordered to stay in Tampa long after it became clear that Isaac would bypass the city. After Sandy, volunteers wandered the streets of New York in search of stricken neighborhoods, lost because they had not been given GPS equipment to guide them.

The skepticism was shared again in 2016 as Hurricane Matthew hurtled toward Haiti.

American Red Cross President and chief executive Gail McGovern responded in a blog post on HuffPost at the time, acknowledging the “persistent myths circulating online” about the Red Cross response in Haiti.

“It creates the false impression that the only thing the American Red Cross did with $488M in donor money was to build six homes — when, in fact, we have funded 100 different humanitarian aid projects in Haiti,” she continued, adding: “It would be a shame if myths circulated online by people who want to help Haiti, actually end up hurting relief efforts.”

On Monday, Minsker, with the Red Cross, further criticized the claims, arguing that all the donations had either been spent or were committed to be spent there.

 

 

http://www.businessconnectworld.com/2017/06/07/donating-to-poor-makes-them-more-poor/

5 Reasons why donations to the poor may bring bad results!

 

 

Doing the MATH

Houston TX area has a population of 2.3 million +

If one presumes that 30% of the population are chronic pain pts… abt 690,000 chronic pain pts in the Houston area

If one presumes that each get their pain meds in 30 days supplies

Presuming that most pharmacies will hold chronic pain pts to a 2 day early refills..  some won’t even allow ONE DAY EARLY…

Since Harvey has been pounding Houston since Friday…

That would suggest that potentially up to  abt 23,000 chronic pain pts will be running out of their pain medication EACH DAY.. and being thrown into cold turkey withdrawal…

AND NOW… TROPICAL STORM HARVEY is headed for New Orleans/Louisiana … to impact more pts.

Of course, probably a lot of healthcare providers are more concerned about their own personal issues caused by this natural disaster … after all … now.. it is every person for themselves…

How our judicial system deals with substance abuse ?

Cuyahoga County is being sued by a former inmate who says jail staff did not properly tend to his medical needs while he went through alcohol and drug withdrawal.Former Cuyahoga County Jail inmate sues, says staff ignored severe withdrawal symptoms

http://www.cleveland.com/court-justice/index.ssf/2017/08/former_cuyahoga_county_jail_in_1.html

Adam BartlettCLEVELAND, Ohio — A Cleveland man is suing Cuyahoga County, county jail staff and employees of The MetroHealth System for what he says was negligent care provided to him while he was in jail and suffering obviously painful symptoms of drug and alcohol withdrawal.

Adam Bartlett, 29, says in a lawsuit filed Monday that he told jail staff when being booked in September 2016 that he was abusing alcohol and opioids and was also prescribed and dependent on Xanax, an anti-anxiety medication.

He did not get his Xanax or any treatment for his addiction or the corresponding withdrawal, and his mental and physical condition deteriorated in the days after being booked, the lawsuit says.

(You can read the lawsuit here or at the bottom of this story.)

Court records show that Bartlett was in jail from Sept. 7, 2016 to Sept. 26, 2016 on a community control violation after pleading guilty to a drug charge.

Staff from the jail and MetroHealth, which provides medical services for inmates, did not properly rate and treat the symptoms as serious, even though he was at times catatonic, disoriented and hallucinating, the lawsuit says.

At one point, a jail guard found Bartlett lying on the floor next to his cell, though he was treated like an uncooperative inmate, and a physician’s assistant determined that Bartlett was faking.

Study: Opioid Users Don’t See Overdose as Wakeup Call Brush with death had little effect on subsequent use

Study: Opioid Users Don’t See Overdose as Wakeup Call

Brush with death had little effect on subsequent use

https://www.medpagetoday.com/PublicHealthPolicy/by-the-numbers/67454

Turns out, even a close call with an overdose isn’t enough to deter opioid users.

As described in a JAMA research letter, Julie M. Donohue, PhD, of the University of Pittsburgh, and colleagues looked at five years of claims data for Medicaid-covered patients in Pennsylvania. They examined records of opioid use both before and after the overdose for 6,000 patients with continuous coverage. About a third of those patients had overdosed on heroin, while the rest overdosed on prescription drugs.

image

Both heroin and prescription overdosers saw a slight reduction in use, at least as measured by filled prescriptions. Filled opioid prescriptions fell from 43.2% before a heroin overdose to 39.7% afterward. Prescription overdosers, meanwhile, fell from 66.1% to 59.6%.

Along the same lines, rates of medication-assisted treatment such as buprenorphine or methadone similarly increased after an overdose, but not by much.

 

 

image

The slight changes in behavior represented a failed opportunity by the medical community, the authors wrote.

“Despite receiving medical attention for an overdose, these patients in Pennsylvania Medicaid continued to have persistently high prescription opioid use, with only slight increases in MAT engagement, signaling a relatively weak health system response to a life-threatening event,” they wrote.

Intervention has been shown to reduce overdose risk, and studies of commercially-insured patients found the potential intervention opportunities represented by overdoses are underutilized. The research letter found evidence of similar underutilization among Medicaid patients, who are three times as likely as their commercially-insured counterparts to have an overdose in the first place.

The authors acknowledged that the results may be specific to Pennsylvania, and that filled prescriptions were an imperfect measure of continued opioid use. Further, focusing on overdoses that required medical attention probably underestimated the number of overdoses and patients affected.

Another example of DEA’s declaring a substance a C-I WITHOUT good evidence it has no medical use ?

FDA Designates MDMA As ‘Breakthrough Therapy’ For Post-Traumatic Stress

https://www.forbes.com/sites/janetwburns/2017/08/28/fda-designates-mdma-as-breakthrough-therapy-for-post-traumatic-stress/#5f9d34e67460

Following years of lobbying and laboratory research on the medical uses of methylenedioxymethamphetamine, or MDMA, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has decided to move forward with the drug.

Last week, the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS) announced that the FDA has granted Breakthrough Therapy Designation to MDMA for the treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Popularly known as a recreational drug, and as the main ingredient in ecstasy, MDMA has been shown to offer significant relief for sufferers of PTSD in clinical use trials conducted over the past several years, leading to the U.S. agency’s decision.

MAPS, which has been championing and fundraising for MDMA research for roughly 30 years, explained in a press release that the FDA’s granting of a Breakthrough Therapy Designation indicates the agency “has agreed that this treatment may have a meaningful advantage and greater compliance over available medications for PTSD.” It also designates the agency’s intent to help develop and review the treatment faster than other candidate therapies. 

See also: Cannabis Shows Promise In Treating Schizophrenia And Tourette Syndrome

 

According to MAPS, the non-profit organization has reached an agreement with the FDA under the Special Protocol Assessment Process for the design of two Phase 3 trials for MDMA-assisted psychotherapy for patients with severe PTSD in the near future.  

“Reaching agreement with [the] FDA on the design of our Phase 3 program and having the ability to work closely with the agency has been a major priority for our team,” said Amy Emerson, Executive Director of the MAPS Public Benefit Corporation, in a release. “Our Phase 2 data was extremely promising with a large effect size, and we are ready to move forward quickly. With breakthrough designation, we can now move even more efficiently through the development process in collaboration with the FDA to complete Phase 3.”

 
National Institute on Drug Abuse

An illustration depicts how MDMA affects brain chemistry by binding to serotonin transporters, causing natural serotonin to temporarily flood the brain. (Public Domain courtesy National Institute on Drug Abuse via Wikimedia Commons)

The drug’s ability to help PTSD-sufferers cope with the lingering effects of trauma is attributed in large part to its capacity to produce feelings of euphoria, empathy, and heightened emotional and physical sensations–in other words, perhaps, giving sorely stressed brains the kind of neurochemical getaway that begets a little peace of mind. Those effects also seem to motivate recreational users, but unlike the self-dosed Saturday night version, official MDMA-assisted psychotherapy involves three administrations of the drug combined with established psychotherapeutic techniques.

Rick Doblin, Founder and Executive Director of MAPS, commented in a statement, “For the first time ever, psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy will be evaluated in Phase 3 trials for possible prescription use, with MDMA-assisted psychotherapy for PTSD leading the way … Now that we have agreement with FDA, we are ready to start negotiations with the European Medicines Agency.”

In Phase 2 trials completed by MAPS, 61% of the 107 participants no longer qualified for PTSD two months after they underwent three sessions of MDMA-assisted psychotherapy, according to the group. After a year, that number grew to 68%, and among participants who had all suffered from chronic, treatment-resistant PTSD, on average for 17.8 years. 

See also: Global Survey Says Magic Mushrooms Are The Safest Recreational Drug

The randomized, placebo-controlled Phase 3 trials will assess the efficacy and safety of MDMA-assisted psychotherapy in a group of 200 to 300 participants with PTSD aged 18+ at sites in the U.S., Canada, and Israel. As Science reported, the trials could begin as soon as next spring and wrap up by 2021 if MAPS is able to find the estimated $25 million needed to conduct them.

As Science reflected, “That an illegal dancefloor drug could become a promising pharmaceutical is another indication that the efforts of a dedicated group of researchers interested in the medicinal properties of mind-altering drugs is paying dividends.”

David Nutt, a neuropsychopharmacologist at Imperial College London, told Science, “This is not a big scientific step … It’s been obvious for 40 years that these drugs are medicines. But it’s a huge step in acceptance.”

Janet Burns covers tech, culture, and other fun stuff from Brooklyn, NY. She also hosts the cannabis news podcast The Toke.

Critical CVS App Flaw Shared Private User Data on 40+ Servers

Critical CVS App Flaw Shared Private User Data on 40+ Servers

www.idropnews.com/news/critical-cvs-app-flaw-shared-user-data-on-40-web-servers/48075/

Critical CVS App Flaw Shared User Data on 40+ Web Servers

Researchers affiliated with the International Computer Science Institute in Berkeley, California, have discovered a flaw in U.S. pharmacy-giant CVS’ iOS app, which has apparently been causing the mobile application to “inadvertently share users’ location data with more than 40 web servers.” That’s according to Serge Egelman, director of user security and private research at ICSI, who shared his team’s findings with both CVS and the International Business Times this week.

According to the report, Egelman and his team discovered the “critical privacy flaw” within the CVS Pharmacy mobile app’s in-built Store Locator feature, which results in the app dispatching the user’s precise GPS coordinates to “dozens of third-party web servers.” Egelman said he and his team “could not imagine a legitimate reason” why an app like CVS’ would share customer’s location data with so many third-party sources.

How Does This Happen?

The CVS Pharmacy mobile app for iOS comes standard with a GPS-driven Store Locator feature, allowing shoppers to locate and get directions to their nearest CVS pharmacy location by merely sending their GPS location data directly to one of the company’s servers. Sounds fairly simple and harmless enough, right? Well, Egelman and his team unfortunately found that the CVS app was inexplicably sending these vital customer details to “any other server that loads on the CVS store locator’s web page.”

“We double checked our logs and even manually re-tested the app. It wasn’t an error; we were able to reproduce this result every time, on multiple versions of the app,” Egelman said about his team’s efforts to pin-point the issue in a blog post, while adding that he believes “the most likely explanation is simply really poor software engineering practices.”

Researchers went on to say they have no idea why or how the CVS app would be voluntarily configured to function the way it was found, but Egelman has nevertheless reported contacting CVS and sharing his team’s findings with them.. As for CVS’ response? Well, it certainly begs a few more questions than it answers: “[CVS] does not share your location or information with any third parties,” the company allegedly said in response to Egelman’s email. “You may, however, if you are not using our app, turn off the locations.”

 

Aetna hit with lawsuit over HIV-status privacy breach

Aetna hit with lawsuit over HIV-status privacy breach

http://www.fiercehealthcare.com/payer/aetna-hit-lawsuit-over-hiv-privacy-breach

Aetna is facing a class-action lawsuit filed on behalf of customers who claim their privacy was breached when they received a letter containing a reference to filling HIV medications that was visible through a window in the envelope. 

The issue came to light last week when two advocacy groups—the Legal Action Center and AIDS Law Project of Pennsylvania—issued a statement outlining the complaints they’ve received from Aetna customers who claim the mailings were seen by family members, roommates and neighbors. 

In response, Aetna issued a public apology and said it is “undertaking a full review of our processes to ensure something like this never happens again.” The insurer had also sent a letter to the 12,000 members who received the letters notifying them of the breach and their rights.

Now, though, the gaffe is a legal matter. Philadelphia-based law firm Berger & Montague filed a complaint (PDF) against Aetna on Monday in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, demanding that the company cease the practice, reform its procedures and pay damages. The lead plaintiff in the case, according to an announcement (PDF), is a Bucks County, Pennsylvania, man whose sister learned from seeing an Aetna letter that her brother was taking medications to prevent acquiring HIV. 

Aetna letter
This photo, provided by the Legal Action Center, shows a redacted mailing
sent to an Aetna member, which the group says revealed the member’s HIV
status through the window of the envelope.

“My law firm and the nonprofit legal organizations with whom we are working believe that the best way to ensure a remedy for the people who received the letters, and suffered harm, is to file a class action suit,” said Sarah Schalman-Bergen, a Berger & Montague shareholder. “We are committed to prosecuting this matter and making sure that this never happens again.”

Indeed, the lawsuit noted that this isn’t the first time Aetna customers have complained about privacy issues related to their HIV prescriptions. Previously, the insurer settled cases brought by members who claimed its policy requiring them to fill HIV medications through mail order, rather than at a pharmacy, jeopardized their privacy. 

Thus, Aetna changed its policy and notified the affected members. But in doing so, it used a third-party mailing vendor, which sent the notices in an envelope with a “large transparent glassine window,” which in some cases made the instructions for how to fill HIV medications visible without having to open the letter.

These actions, the lawsuit said, “carelessly, recklessly, negligently and impermissibly” revealed HIV-related information of Aetna’s current and former members to their “family, friends, roommates, landlords, neighbors, mail carriers and complete strangers.”

When reached by email, an Aetna spokesman said the company had no comment on the lawsuit.

At least one state official, meanwhile, has also expressed concern about the privacy breach. New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman tweeted last week that he sent a letter to Aetna asking for more information:

 

The Lead Vaccine Developer Comes Clean So She Can “Sleep At Night”

The Lead Vaccine Developer Comes Clean So She Can “Sleep At Night”

www.realfarmacy.com/the-lead-vaccine-developer-comes-clean/

Gardasil and Cervarix don’t work, are dangerous, and weren’t tested

Dr. Diane Harper was the lead researcher in the development of the human papilloma virus vaccines, Gardasil and Cervarix. She is the latest to come forward and question the safety and effectiveness of these vaccines. She made the surprising announcement at the 4th International Public Conference on Vaccination, which took place in Reston, Virginia on Oct. 2nd through 4th, 2009. Her speech was supposed to promote the Gardasil and Cervarix vaccines, but she instead turned on her corporate bosses in a very public way. When questioned about the presentation, audience members remarked that they came away feeling that the vaccines should not be used.

“I came away from the talk with the perception that the risk of adverse side effects is so much greater than the risk of cervical cancer, I couldn’t help but question why we need the vaccine at all.”  – Joan Robinson

Dr. Harper explained in her presentation that the cervical cancer risk in the U.S. is already extremely low, and that vaccinations are unlikely to have any effect upon the rate of cervical cancer in the United States. In fact, 70% of all H.P.V. infections resolve themselves without treatment in a year, and the number rises to well over 90% in two years. Harper also mentioned the safety angle. All trials of the vaccines were done on children aged 15 and above, despite them currently being marketed for 9-year-olds. So far, 15,037 girls have reported adverse side effects from Gardasil alone to the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (V.A.E.R.S.), and this number only reflects parents who underwent the hurdles required for reporting adverse reactions. At the time of writing, 44 girls are officially known to have died from these vaccines. The reported side effects include Guillian Barré Syndrome (paralysis lasting for years, or permanently — sometimes eventually causing suffocation), lupus, seizures, blood clots, and brain inflammation. Parents are usually not made aware of these risks. Dr. Harper, the vaccine developer, claimed that she was speaking out, so that she might finally be able to sleep at night.

About eight in every ten women who have been sexually active will have H.P.V. at some stage of their life. Normally there are no symptoms, and in 98 per cent of cases it clears itself. But in those cases where it doesn’t, and isn’t treated, it can lead to pre-cancerous cells which may develop into cervical cancer.”  – Dr. Diane Harper

One must understand how the establishment’s word games are played to truly understand the meaning of the above quote, and one needs to understand its unique version of “science”. When they report that untreated cases “can” lead to something that “may” lead to cervical cancer, it really means that the relationship is merely a hypothetical conjecture that is profitable if people actually believe it. In other words, there is no demonstrated relationship between the condition being vaccinated for and the rare cancers that the vaccine might prevent, but it is marketed to do that nonetheless. In fact, there is no actual evidence that the vaccine can prevent any cancer. From the manufacturers own admissions, the vaccine only works on 4 strains out of 40 for a specific venereal disease that dies on its own in a relatively short period, so the chance of it actually helping an individual is about about the same as the chance of him being struck by a meteorite. Why do nine-year-old girls need vaccinations for extremely rare and symptom-less venereal diseases that the immune system usually kills anyway?

Out with the “old” and in with the “new” and “cheaper” ?

Someone has asked for some help in spreading Walmarts new directives. Many Walmart Rphs are in the mid to high 60’s per hour pay rate. The new goal is to have pharmacy managers at 55 per hour and staff at 52 per hour. This info came from a market manager that was at meeting in Arkansas last week. They are not terminating people for the usual business metrics like the three letter chain or for immunization metrics, but rather policy and procedures. The biggest area for terminations is coming from pharmacists using the restroom. Most Walmarts have a restroom within the gated area, however according to the policy and procedures below this leaves the pharmacy unattended and out of sight.The policy and procedures trump state laws that require a RPh to be in the building….according to Walmart they need to have the pharmacy in sight. One such Pharmacist was more than 3 feet out of the OTC section while helping a patient and was fired. Bathroom breaks are only at lunch when the pharmacy is closed. If you can help in any way it would be greatly appreciated. Many have been terminated for the bathroom thing and of course were replaced with someone will to take much less pay. Just like at CVS I’m sure most don’t review these policies to often.
Image result for Policy And Procedure Clipart

click on above graphic to pull up new policies and procedures

 
 

Everything you think you know about addiction is wrong