In view of the spending going on by our illustrious politicians, a thought to ponder. They throw a trillion $ around like it is well understood by society and especially themselves. However, to put things into perspective:
One million seconds.....equals....Twelve Days.
One trillion seconds.....equals.....Thirty one THOUSAND years.
Needless to say...this spending equals the destruction of America a s we have known it.
Firstly,
on behalf of LDNNow I would like to thank each and every one of you who has
supported us with the LDNNow petitions to both 10 Downing Street and the
Scottish Parliament
With
regards to the LDNNow petition to 10 Downing Street, the petition is only the
tip of the iceberg of LDNNow’s activities and far from being the main
thrust. It is a rallying flag for us to get the support needed, secondly
to prove that the demand for LDN is there, an opportunity to educate the public
through the media about Low Dose Naltrexone, and most of all an opportunity to
work with our MPs, AMs, MEPs, MSPs, etc.
The response from the government is in agreement with us -
there is a need for LDN trials and research, and they did point out how to get
more research into LDN. Andrew Lansley, MP, the Shadow Health Minister
advised us about this back in August and we took immediate action by contacting
NIHR. I am pleased to inform everyone that the NIHR TA will be discussing
this at their panel meeting on 19th January 2010. We have
requested to participate in this meeting.
By petitioning No 10 Downing Street has opened many doors
for us and that was its purpose. As a political/pressure group and as a
result of this petition, we have got many MPs working together who are
currently putting a petition to the House of Commons which will be lead by Nia
Griffiths MP and Stephen Crabb MP (and Chairman of the Conservative Parties
Human Rights Committee. In addition the team at LDNNow is growing and all
pulling together to make this movement happen. We will keep you updated on the
results as they mature.
We always felt the Government were going to respond as they
did but we have been working around this for a year now so are actually ahead
of the game (so to speak). The question which remains is who will
finance this research? At LDN Now we firmly believe the public sector must fill
the vacuum left by the private sector here and this is why we are fully
committed to engagement with our politicians to ensure this important research
is done so that all who can benefit from LDN treatment get the chance to do so.
As
mentioned on these forums previously, this is rapidly becoming a human rights
issue so please watch out for the link to the European Parliament to help make
LDN available to all. This should be available in the New Year.
And
on that note may I take this opportunity on behalf of the team at LDNNow to
once again thank you for your support throughout this year and wish you all a
Merry Christmas. Roll on 2010!
Jayne
Jayne Crocker
http//www.LDNNow.com/
tel: +44 (0) 7877 492 669
Dr Chris Steele, ITV's This
Morning supporting LDN
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5p5nhzP2OaI
Follow us on twitter
http://twitter.com/LD_Naltrexone
Dr Chris Steele, ITV's This
Morning supporting LDN
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5p5nhzP2OaI
Follow us on twitter
http://twitter.com/LD_Naltrexone
LDNNow, a patient and friend
led organisation (so not a charity) with no funding and no affiliation to any
company or organisation, but rather a group of concerned individuals
focussed on improving the health of those who suffer from the many diseases and
conditions that LDN treats.
Dr Chris Steele, ITV's This
Morning supporting LDN
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5p5nhzP2OaI
Follow us on twitter
http://twitter.com/LD_Naltrexone
LDNNow, a patient and friend
led organisation (so not a charity) with no funding and no affiliation to any
company or organisation, but rather a group of concerned individuals
focussed on improving the health of those who suffer from the many diseases and
conditions that LDN treats.
Possible MS breakthrough neglected by American media
by Erika Milvy
Folks who suffer from Multiple Sclerosis are not really a rowdy bunch.. Activism and outrage are hard to muster for the chronically fatigued. But since Thanksgiving, people with MS and their loved ones have gone all ACT-UP 2.0.
That is, the past few weeks have seen a surge in online activity within the MS community - as bloggers, vloggers and forum posters are calling one another to action in response to the lack of response to what many perceive to the scientific breakthrough they've been waiting for.
If you haven't heard about the report in December's Journal of Vascular Sciences by Italian vascular surgeon Dr. Paolo Zamboni, then you probably live in America.
I don't suffer from premature ejaculation but I do know, (thanks to the New York Times), that there's a new drug for it available in nine countries, but that it hasn't yet been approved for sale in the United States.
But when I went looking for news about Dr. Zamboni's research, I could not find it the mainstream press. I did find it all over the Canadian Press and European Press.
Let me start by saying I am not a doctor nor do I play one on TV.
On November 21, CTV W5 (Canada's top television network), aired an in-depth story about "a stunning new discovery of a revolutionary new treatment for a debilitating disease." They interviewed Dr. Paolo Zamboni, from the University of Ferrara in northern Italy. His research suggests that MS is not, as widely believed, primarily an autoimmune condition, but a vascular disease (CCSVI, short for chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency.) Dr. Zamboni found that, in over 90 percent of people with Multiple Sclerosis, the veins draining blood from the brain were constricted and this led to a buildup of iron in the brain that, he theorized, causes the neurological symptoms of MS.
MS would therefore be caused by a drainage problem, a plumbing clog that Zamboni posits can be rectified with a simple but experimental surgical technique similar to an angioplasty. Zamboni (and up until last week, a doctor at Stanford) have since done the procedure on over 100 patients and Zamboni reports vast improvement in patients' symptoms nearly immediately. Zamboni's wife, Elena Zamboni was one of his first success stories - her MS being his driving force.
Since then, a battle between patients and practitioners has hit the net. Fervor has collided against skepticism and medical cynicism - and media disregard has stirred up resentment and even conspiracy theories.
Patients' blood (whether it is or is not circulating adequately in the veins) has been boiling.
It began after the Canadian television aired their interview with Dr. Zamboni. The broadcast went swine viral. Avis Favaro, the reporter who broke the story, said that she has been "shocked at the tremendous response to this story. It is beyond that for any other medical story we have worked on." The segment has been linked to countless times worldwide and translated into other languages."
The web was ablaze. People with MS finally heard the word "breaththrough" and heard the long long-awaited announcement of what was a potentially paradigm shifting game changer. These were not just mice getting better.
"My legs don't work, but I'm jumping up and down," said one hopeful MS patient on YouTube. So when the videos and links arrived in the inboxes of MS patients in the U.S. they looked to the reputable news media for more information.
But still the mainstream press wasn't reporting the story. On ThisIsMS.com, an MS info-exchange, postings about CCSVI topped 16,000, (other treatment news numbers in the tens or hundreds.) In online forums, discussions turned to "where is the coverage on this?" "No one will listen" is the title of one long thread. A Facebook group called "MS Uprising" was born, a YouTube channel was born.
The MS society of Canada crafted a statement of cautious optimism. They adapted a "wait and see stance, urging patients to "temper their euphoria."
Web activists were not satisfied and began to draft petitions and suggest diverting donations to directly support hospitals like University of Buffalo where Zamboni's approach is being further studied.
Of the MS society's statement, Dr. Lorne Brandes, an oncologist who blogs for CTV News' Health Blog, wrote, "If their official response to Dr. Zamboni's research was any cooler, icicles would form on their spokespersons' lips. Why am I not surprised? These organizations are big money operations, run by risk-adverse professionals and fundraisers who are absolutely petrified of making a mistake and prematurely backing a losing horse. Their interests are also heavily intertwined with those of Big Pharma."
This sentiment is echoed again and again. Online articles scream out with Woodward and Bernstein-wannabee headlines like "Simple Surgical Cure for Multiple Sclerosis Opposed by Big Pharma" and "Multiple Sclerosis cure found, MS societies in panic" - (but the article's content is just a reprint of The Globe and Mail's less provocatively titled "Researcher's labour of love leads to MS breakthrough."
But when bloggers and vloggers and posters invoke "Big Pharma," they start sounding like they think they're Ralph Fiennes in "The Constant Gardener" - blowing the whistle on the industry's evils.
Still, when newly radicalized sick people notice that the media isn't reporting on this big story and notice that neurologists and advocacy organizations are minimizing or denigrating the importance of Zamboni's findings, their conspiracy theories start to sound sort of plausible.
That is, just because they're paranoid doesn't mean that Big Pharma isn't out to get them. The pharmaceutical industry stands to lose a lot if Zamboni's one-time treatment pans out. The most common drug therapies for MS cost about $30,000 a year. And there are well over 100 medications for various MS symptoms.
On one MS forum is a link to another pharma-gate headline: "Big Pharma's Crime Spree", in which the reporter for Bloomberg Markets Magazine assesses that "finding cures is not even remotely a consideration by pharmaceutical executives."
While this idea is not a new one, when you pair it with the recent directives from the MS Society (well-funded by the drug industry) patient distrust doesn't seem unwarranted.
The Canadian MS Society urged patients "not to abandon the treatment they are on." The US went further, discouraging patients from getting tested at all. Prescribing ignorance is bad advice. At best it's condescending.
Much of the medical establishment's approach seems to be likewise paternalistic. Some patients have concluded that naysaying neurologists are territorial - MS is their disease. And if Zamboni is right, MS researchers have been barking up the wrong tree for decades.
Bloggers gripe that the US scientific establishment is mired in red tape and is overly-concerned about malpractice. So some have already undergone experimental surgery. With degenerative disease breathing down their necks, some patients are ready to pursue even a glimpse of a cure, damning the torpedoes. Which alarms many of their doctors. Who rain on their parade. Which causes more suspicion and activism.
Dr. Elizabeth Crabtree, a neurologist at UCSF's MS Center, has plans to begin an ongoing podcast to better inform MS patients of new developments. So they don't have to learn it on the streets, as it were. "No wonder there's so much distrust," she said. "The treatment options are inadequate." She expressed frustration that medical facilities compete instead of collaborate. Patients, doctors and support groups should be working in alliance, she said.
Whether egos and money do get in the way of out-of-the-box thinking, one cautionary tale does loom. A patient at Stanford died following CCSVI surgery recently and another patient underwent open heart surgery after a stent migrated to his heart. The Stanford program was swiftly halted.
Dr. Michael Dake's "under the radar" stent implants (Zamboni uses a "balloon" procedure ) were conducted before a clinical trial. But instead of being deemed unethical, Dr. Dake was called a hero and a "pioneer" in online groups.
"This I would do," said Dayle Baich of the Zamboni procedure. Baich, who now uses a walker because of her MS, told The Ottawa Citizen, "it's a very simple surgery, compared to two years of chemotherapy. In three years, I have gone from being normal to now. So where am I going to be in two or three more years? I don't have the time. Neither do most of the people here."
As a direct result of patient activism, the MS Society has announced plans to fund CCSVI research and clinical trials will commence at several medical centers in 2010. CBS and other esteemed news outlets have caught wind of the whirlwind. Their coverage is due out soon.
Such is the story of keyboard activism - among the "handicapable" (a term the TV show "Glee" recently coined.)
In case Ralph Fiennes is looking for his next project.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Possible MS breakthrough neglected by American media by Erika Milvy Folks who suffer from Multiple Sclerosis are not really a rowdy bunch.. Activism and outrage are hard to muster for the chronically fatigued. But since Thanksgiving, people with MS and their loved ones have gone all ACT-UP 2.0. That is, the past few weeks have seen a surge in online activity within the MS community - as bloggers, vloggers and forum posters are calling one another to action in response to the lack of response to what many perceive to the scientific breakthrough they've been waiting for. If you haven't heard about the report in December's Journal of Vascular Sciences by Italian vascular surgeon Dr. Paolo Zamboni, then you probably live in America. I don't suffer from premature ejaculation but I do know, (thanks to the New York Times), that there's a new drug for it available in nine countries, but that it hasn't yet been approved for sale in the United States. But when I went looking for news about Dr. Zamboni's research, I could not find it the mainstream press. I did find it all over the Canadian Press and European Press. Let me start by saying I am not a doctor nor do I play one on TV. On November 21, CTV W5 (Canada's top television network), aired an in-depth story about "a stunning new discovery of a revolutionary new treatment for a debilitating disease." They interviewed Dr. Paolo Zamboni, from the University of Ferrara in northern Italy. His research suggests that MS is not, as widely believed, primarily an autoimmune condition, but a vascular disease (CCSVI, short for chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency.) Dr. Zamboni found that, in over 90 percent of people with Multiple Sclerosis, the veins draining blood from the brain were constricted and this led to a buildup of iron in the brain that, he theorized, causes the neurological symptoms of MS. MS would therefore be caused by a drainage problem, a plumbing clog that Zamboni posits can be rectified with a simple but experimental surgical technique similar to an angioplasty. Zamboni (and up until last week, a doctor at Stanford) have since done the procedure on over 100 patients and Zamboni reports vast improvement in patients' symptoms nearly immediately. Zamboni's wife, Elena Zamboni was one of his first success stories - her MS being his driving force. Since then, a battle between patients and practitioners has hit the net. Fervor has collided against skepticism and medical cynicism - and media disregard has stirred up resentment and even conspiracy theories. Patients' blood (whether it is or is not circulating adequately in the veins) has been boiling. It began after the Canadian television aired their interview with Dr. Zamboni. The broadcast went swine viral. Avis Favaro, the reporter who broke the story, said that she has been "shocked at the tremendous response to this story. It is beyond that for any other medical story we have worked on." The segment has been linked to countless times worldwide and translated into other languages." The web was ablaze. People with MS finally heard the word "breaththrough" and heard the long long-awaited announcement of what was a potentially paradigm shifting game changer. These were not just mice getting better. "My legs don't work, but I'm jumping up and down," said one hopeful MS patient on YouTube. So when the videos and links arrived in the inboxes of MS patients in the U.S. they looked to the reputable news media for more information. But still the mainstream press wasn't reporting the story. On ThisIsMS.com, an MS info-exchange, postings about CCSVI topped 16,000, (other treatment news numbers in the tens or hundreds.) In online forums, discussions turned to "where is the coverage on this?" "No one will listen" is the title of one long thread. A Facebook group called "MS Uprising" was born, a YouTube channel was born. The MS society of Canada crafted a statement of cautious optimism. They adapted a "wait and see stance, urging patients to "temper their euphoria." Web activists were not satisfied and began to draft petitions and suggest diverting donations to directly support hospitals like University of Buffalo where Zamboni's approach is being further studied. Of the MS society's statement, Dr. Lorne Brandes, an oncologist who blogs for CTV News' Health Blog, wrote, "If their official response to Dr. Zamboni's research was any cooler, icicles would form on their spokespersons' lips. Why am I not surprised? These organizations are big money operations, run by risk-adverse professionals and fundraisers who are absolutely petrified of making a mistake and prematurely backing a losing horse. Their interests are also heavily intertwined with those of Big Pharma." This sentiment is echoed again and again. Online articles scream out with Woodward and Bernstein-wannabee headlines like "Simple Surgical Cure for Multiple Sclerosis Opposed by Big Pharma" and "Multiple Sclerosis cure found, MS societies in panic" - (but the article's content is just a reprint of The Globe and Mail's less provocatively titled "Researcher's labour of love leads to MS breakthrough." But when bloggers and vloggers and posters invoke "Big Pharma," they start sounding like they think they're Ralph Fiennes in "The Constant Gardener" - blowing the whistle on the industry's evils. Still, when newly radicalized sick people notice that the media isn't reporting on this big story and notice that neurologists and advocacy organizations are minimizing or denigrating the importance of Zamboni's findings, their conspiracy theories start to sound sort of plausible. That is, just because they're paranoid doesn't mean that Big Pharma isn't out to get them. The pharmaceutical industry stands to lose a lot if Zamboni's one-time treatment pans out. The most common drug therapies for MS cost about $30,000 a year. And there are well over 100 medications for various MS symptoms. On one MS forum is a link to another pharma-gate headline: "Big Pharma's Crime Spree", in which the reporter for Bloomberg Markets Magazine assesses that "finding cures is not even remotely a consideration by pharmaceutical executives." While this idea is not a new one, when you pair it with the recent directives from the MS Society (well-funded by the drug industry) patient distrust doesn't seem unwarranted. The Canadian MS Society urged patients "not to abandon the treatment they are on." The US went further, discouraging patients from getting tested at all. Prescribing ignorance is bad advice. At best it's condescending. Much of the medical establishment's approach seems to be likewise paternalistic. Some patients have concluded that naysaying neurologists are territorial - MS is their disease. And if Zamboni is right, MS researchers have been barking up the wrong tree for decades. Bloggers gripe that the US scientific establishment is mired in red tape and is overly-concerned about malpractice. So some have already undergone experimental surgery. With degenerative disease breathing down their necks, some patients are ready to pursue even a glimpse of a cure, damning the torpedoes. Which alarms many of their doctors. Who rain on their parade. Which causes more suspicion and activism. Dr. Elizabeth Crabtree, a neurologist at UCSF's MS Center, has plans to begin an ongoing podcast to better inform MS patients of new developments. So they don't have to learn it on the streets, as it were. "No wonder there's so much distrust," she said. "The treatment options are inadequate." She expressed frustration that medical facilities compete instead of collaborate. Patients, doctors and support groups should be working in alliance, she said. Whether egos and money do get in the way of out-of-the-box thinking, one cautionary tale does loom. A patient at Stanford died following CCSVI surgery recently and another patient underwent open heart surgery after a stent migrated to his heart. The Stanford program was swiftly halted. Dr. Michael Dake's "under the radar" stent implants (Zamboni uses a "balloon" procedure ) were conducted before a clinical trial. But instead of being deemed unethical, Dr. Dake was called a hero and a "pioneer" in online groups. "This I would do," said Dayle Baich of the Zamboni procedure. Baich, who now uses a walker because of her MS, told The Ottawa Citizen, "it's a very simple surgery, compared to two years of chemotherapy. In three years, I have gone from being normal to now. So where am I going to be in two or three more years? I don't have the time. Neither do most of the people here." As a direct result of patient activism, the MS Society has announced plans to fund CCSVI research and clinical trials will commence at several medical centers in 2010. CBS and other esteemed news outlets have caught wind of the whirlwind. Their coverage is due out soon. Such is the story of keyboard activism - among the "handicapable" (a term the TV show "Glee" recently coined.) In case Ralph Fiennes is looking for his next project.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Dr Chris Steele, ITV's This Morning supporting LDN
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5p5nhzP2OaI
Follow us on twitter http://twitter.com/LD_Naltrexone
LDNNow, a patient and friend led organisation (so not a charity)
with no funding and no affiliation to any company or organisation, but
rather a group of concerned individuals focussed on improving the health
of those who suffer from the many diseases and conditions that LDN treats.
From: ldnsupport@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:ldnsupport@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of daddiesgirl567_2006 Sent: 17 December 2009 16:56 To: ldnsupport@yahoogroups.com Subject: [ldnsupport] Re: [lowdosenaltrexone] Another group that won't
allow people to talk about LDN!
HI JAYNE;\
DO YOU MIND IF I USE THIS ALSO TO BRING AWARNESS TO PPL ABOUT LDN AND THE
DIFFRENT AREAS OF ITS USE.
THANK YOU IN ADVANCE
DADDIES
--- In ldnsupport@yahoogroups.com,
jaynelcrocker <jaynelcrocker@...> wrote:
>
> Sherri, I’ve sent you studies and references to send to him. This will
keep him very busy and tell him not to be so ignorant to delete a post without
him doing his research first! Didn’t I read somewhere that the NMSS in the
USA finally post something ‘favourable’ towards LDN? He could do with this
reminder seeing as he’s so ‘pro’ MS Society. FYI, my letter to the MS Society,
feel free to use whatever you want, he could do with understanding MS and LDN http://groups.google.com/group/alt.support.mult-sclerosis/msg/7032aa89e210cf40
>
>
>
> I got a response to the above which just said ‘Thank you for your
letter’, and that was it. I also told them that if we want a journalist to
contact any charity regarding MS it will be the MSRC here in the UK, not the MS
Society.
>
>
>
> Jayne
>
> Jayne Crocker
>
> Chairperson, LDNNow
>
> tel: +44 (0) 7877 492 669
>
> www.ldnnow.com <- click on petition link to support LDN as a front line
treatment
>
> Dr Chris Steele, ITV's This Morning supporting LDN
>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CVpjsDK0LPA
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> From: lowdosenaltrexone@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:lowdosenaltrexone@yahoogroups.com]
On Behalf Of Sherri White
> Sent: 08 November 2009 18:42
> To: LDN_Users@yahoogroups.com;
lowdosenaltrexone@yahoogroups.com;
LDN Support
> Subject: [lowdosenaltrexone] Another group that won't allow people to talk
about LDN!
>
>
>
>
>
> Hi, everyone!
>
>
>
> If you use Facebook, this might apply to you. If not, please disregard.
>
>
>
> I belong to several MS and LDN groups on Facebook. Stan Lawrence actually
sent me a request to be his friend. He has approximately 1,200 friends on the
site with MS. Each day he posts many, many stories (with the person's picture)
about needing advice, hugs, words of encouragement, etc. Yesterday he posted a
story about Kathy, who just recently lost her health insurance and is no longer
able to take Rebif. Everyone was telling her how sorry they were and to call
the NMSS to get assistance for her drug coverage. There was one comment,
however, that suggested she look into LDN. So I chimed in and agreed with that
person. I said something to the effect about how it's done wonders for me and
that I had tried Avonex, Copaxone and Tysabri. I gave Kathy a couple of links
to check out and told her that if I was still working as a nurse, I would
recommend my patients talk to their doctors about it if they had an autoimmune
disease.
>
>
>
> Last night when I returned home and checked my e-mail, I was notified by
Stan that he deleted my comment. Here's the e-mail exchange between the two of
us (rather long, sorry guys):
>
>
>
>
> im deleting your comment today because you are giving professional advice
because u r a nurse.
>
>
> Between <http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1340643599>
You and <http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=504444054>
Stan Lawrence
>
> <http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=504444054>
>
> <http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=504444054>
Stan Lawrence November 7 at 2:02pm <http://www.facebook.com/ajax/report.php?type=9&cid=1199245992975&rid=504444054&cid3=1&h=8bfdc20a1b>
Report
>
> please do not post anything more about ldn until you have sent me a study
that backing up your claims...so that I can read more about it. I do not
normally let anyone post things about treatments that are not FDA
approved...but I will if you can send me some research that...at least...the MS
Society agrees with..
>
> stan
>
> <http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1340643599>
>
> <http://www.facebook..com/profile.php?id=1340643599>
Sherri Shelton White November 7 at 11:08pm
>
> Stan,
>
> UCSF did a small study in 2007 that was funded by patients. It was
conducted by Dr. Cree, who is a neurologist in their multiple sclerosis center.
Here's a link to his study: <http://painsandiego.files.wordpress.com/2009/05/ldn-in-ms-bruce-cree-md_-2008-ucsf-poster.pdf>
http://painsandiego.files.wordpress.com/2009/05/ldn-in-ms-bruce-cree-md_-2008-ucsf-poster.pdf
and here's information from the National Multiple Sclerosis Society on the same
study: <http://www.nationalmssociety.org/news/news-detail/index.aspx?nid=148>
http://www.nationalmssociety.org/news/news-detail/index.aspx?nid=148.
Here's a site that discusses clinical trials past, present and in the future:
<http://lowdosenaltrexone.org/ldn_trials.htm>
http://lowdosenaltrexone.org/ldn_trials.htm.
>
> UCSF is in the process of applying for a grant through the NMSS to conduct
a larger study on LDN. This is according to the director of the UCSF MS Center,
Dr. Doug Goodin, who I see. He is also the one who believes I should stay on
LDN and not go back on any of the other disease-modifying drugs because LDN
WORKS!
>
> There's a lot of information out there for you to read, Stan. All you have
to do is read and click on the links I sent Kathy. In case you have deleted
them and don't remember, they are: http://www.ldninfo.org
<http://www.ldninfo.org/> and http://www.ldn-help.com <http://www.ldn-help.com/> . LDN is not
quackery, it does work and there are many people out there who have been helped
by it. Once again, read testimony on the links above.
>
> As far as talking about medications that are not FDA-approved, you have to
be careful about that, Stan. What about people who use neurontin off-label for
trigeminal neuralgia? Neurontin is approved for seizures. Are you going to ban
comments because someone talked about that? What about using Hytrin off-label
for neurogenic bladder dysfunction when it's supposed to be used for high blood
pressure? See where I'm going on this? Here’s a link to off-label
medications: <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Off-label_use>
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Off-label_use.
>
> As a nurse, I can't prescribe LDN but I can encourage and empower my
patients with good information so that he or she can talk to a doctor. I wasn't
giving professional advice! I'm actually insulted and mad. Why couldn't you
have made your own post under mine asking for additional links or information
to follow up my claims instead of deleting it? That way, everyone who commented
under that link, including Kathy, might have additional information. Pathetic!!
>
> I just find it interesting that it's ok for the Big Pharma medications to
be talked about, but it's not ok for off-label or non FDA-approved drugs to be
mentioned.
>
> Sherri
>
HI JAYNE;\
DO YOU MIND IF I USE THIS ALSO TO BRING AWARNESS TO PPL ABOUT LDN AND THE
DIFFRENT AREAS OF ITS USE.
THANK YOU IN ADVANCE
DADDIES
--- In ldnsupport@yahoogroups.com, jaynelcrocker <jaynelcrocker@...> wrote:
>
> Sherri, I’ve sent you studies and references to send to him. This will keep
him very busy and tell him not to be so ignorant to delete a post without him
doing his research first! Didn’t I read somewhere that the NMSS in the USA
finally post something ‘favourable’ towards LDN? He could do with this
reminder seeing as he’s so ‘pro’ MS Society. FYI, my letter to the MS
Society, feel free to use whatever you want, he could do with understanding MS
and LDN
http://groups.google.com/group/alt.support.mult-sclerosis/msg/7032aa89e210cf40
>
>
>
> I got a response to the above which just said ‘Thank you for your letter’,
and that was it. I also told them that if we want a journalist to contact any
charity regarding MS it will be the MSRC here in the UK, not the MS Society.
>
>
>
> Jayne
>
> Jayne Crocker
>
> Chairperson, LDNNow
>
> tel: +44 (0) 7877 492 669
>
> www.ldnnow.com <- click on petition link to support LDN as a front line
treatment
>
> Dr Chris Steele, ITV's This Morning supporting LDN
>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CVpjsDK0LPA
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> From: lowdosenaltrexone@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:lowdosenaltrexone@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Sherri White
> Sent: 08 November 2009 18:42
> To: LDN_Users@yahoogroups.com; lowdosenaltrexone@yahoogroups.com; LDN Support
> Subject: [lowdosenaltrexone] Another group that won't allow people to talk
about LDN!
>
>
>
>
>
> Hi, everyone!
>
>
>
> If you use Facebook, this might apply to you. If not, please disregard.
>
>
>
> I belong to several MS and LDN groups on Facebook. Stan Lawrence actually sent
me a request to be his friend. He has approximately 1,200 friends on the site
with MS. Each day he posts many, many stories (with the person's picture) about
needing advice, hugs, words of encouragement, etc. Yesterday he posted a story
about Kathy, who just recently lost her health insurance and is no longer able
to take Rebif. Everyone was telling her how sorry they were and to call the NMSS
to get assistance for her drug coverage. There was one comment, however, that
suggested she look into LDN. So I chimed in and agreed with that person. I said
something to the effect about how it's done wonders for me and that I had tried
Avonex, Copaxone and Tysabri. I gave Kathy a couple of links to check out and
told her that if I was still working as a nurse, I would recommend my patients
talk to their doctors about it if they had an autoimmune disease.
>
>
>
> Last night when I returned home and checked my e-mail, I was notified by Stan
that he deleted my comment. Here's the e-mail exchange between the two of us
(rather long, sorry guys):
>
>
>
>
> im deleting your comment today because you are giving professional advice
because u r a nurse.
>
>
> Between <http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1340643599> You and
<http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=504444054> Stan Lawrence
>
> <http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=504444054>
>
> <http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=504444054> Stan Lawrence November 7
at 2:02pm
<http://www.facebook.com/ajax/report.php?type=9&cid=1199245992975&rid=504444054&\
cid3=1&h=8bfdc20a1b> Report
>
> please do not post anything more about ldn until you have sent me a study that
backing up your claims...so that I can read more about it. I do not normally let
anyone post things about treatments that are not FDA approved...but I will if
you can send me some research that...at least...the MS Society agrees with..
>
> stan
>
> <http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1340643599>
>
> <http://www.facebook..com/profile.php?id=1340643599> Sherri Shelton White
November 7 at 11:08pm
>
> Stan,
>
> UCSF did a small study in 2007 that was funded by patients. It was conducted
by Dr. Cree, who is a neurologist in their multiple sclerosis center. Here's a
link to his study:
<http://painsandiego.files.wordpress.com/2009/05/ldn-in-ms-bruce-cree-md_-2008-u\
csf-poster.pdf>
http://painsandiego.files.wordpress.com/2009/05/ldn-in-ms-bruce-cree-md_-2008-uc\
sf-poster.pdf and here's information from the National Multiple Sclerosis
Society on the same study:
<http://www.nationalmssociety.org/news/news-detail/index.aspx?nid=148>
http://www.nationalmssociety.org/news/news-detail/index.aspx?nid=148. Here's a
site that discusses clinical trials past, present and in the future:
<http://lowdosenaltrexone.org/ldn_trials.htm>
http://lowdosenaltrexone.org/ldn_trials.htm.
>
> UCSF is in the process of applying for a grant through the NMSS to conduct a
larger study on LDN. This is according to the director of the UCSF MS Center,
Dr. Doug Goodin, who I see. He is also the one who believes I should stay on LDN
and not go back on any of the other disease-modifying drugs because LDN WORKS!
>
> There's a lot of information out there for you to read, Stan. All you have to
do is read and click on the links I sent Kathy. In case you have deleted them
and don't remember, they are: http://www.ldninfo.org <http://www.ldninfo.org/>
and http://www.ldn-help.com <http://www.ldn-help.com/> . LDN is not quackery, it
does work and there are many people out there who have been helped by it. Once
again, read testimony on the links above.
>
> As far as talking about medications that are not FDA-approved, you have to be
careful about that, Stan. What about people who use neurontin off-label for
trigeminal neuralgia? Neurontin is approved for seizures. Are you going to ban
comments because someone talked about that? What about using Hytrin off-label
for neurogenic bladder dysfunction when it's supposed to be used for high blood
pressure? See where I'm going on this? Here’s a link to off-label medications:
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Off-label_use>
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Off-label_use.
>
> As a nurse, I can't prescribe LDN but I can encourage and empower my patients
with good information so that he or she can talk to a doctor. I wasn't giving
professional advice! I'm actually insulted and mad. Why couldn't you have made
your own post under mine asking for additional links or information to follow up
my claims instead of deleting it? That way, everyone who commented under that
link, including Kathy, might have additional information. Pathetic!!
>
> I just find it interesting that it's ok for the Big Pharma medications to be
talked about, but it's not ok for off-label or non FDA-approved drugs to be
mentioned.
>
> Sherri
>
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"It is not strange... to mistake change for progress."
Just in case some of you young whippersnappers (& some older ones) didn't know this. It's easy to check out, if you don't believe it. Be sure and show it to your kids. They need a little history lesson on what's what and it doesn't matter whether you are Democrat or Republican. Facts are Facts!!!
Our Social Security
Franklin Roosevelt, a Democrat, introduced the Social Security (FICA) Program. He promised:
1.) That participation in the Program would be Completely voluntary,
No longer Voluntary
2.) That the participants would only have to pay 1% of the first $1,400 of their annual Incomes into the Program,
Now 7.65% on the first $90,000
3.) That the money the participants elected to put into the Program would be deductible from their income for tax purposes each year,
No longer tax deductible
4.) That the money the participants put into the independent 'Trust Fund' rather than into the general operating fund, and therefore, would only be used to fund the Social Security Retirement Program, and no other Government program, and,
Under Johnson the money was moved to the General Fund and Spent
5.) That the annuity payments to the retirees would never be taxed as income.
Under Clinton & Gore Up to 85% of your Social Security can be Taxed
Since many of us have paid into FICA for years and are now receiving a Social Security check every month -- and then finding that we are getting taxed on 85% of the money we paid to the Federal government to 'put away' -- you may be interested in the following:
Q: Which Political Party decided to start giving annuity payments to immigrants?
AND MY FAVORITE:
A: That's right! Jimmy Carter and the Democratic Party. immigrants moved into this country, and at age 65, began to receive Social Security payments! The Democratic Party gave these payments to them, even though they never paid a dime into it!
Then, after violating the original contract (FICA), the Democrats turn around and tell you that the Republicans want to take your Social Security away!
And the worst part about it is uninformed citizens believe it! If enough people receive this, maybe a seed of awareness will be planted and maybe changes will evolve. Maybe not, some Democrats are awfully sure of what isn't so.
But it's worth a try. How many people can YOU send this to?
Actions speak louder than bumper stickers. AND CONGRESS GIVES THEMSELVES 100% RETIREMENT FOR ONLY SERVING ONE TERM!!!
A government big enough to give you everything you want, is strong enough to take everything you have. -Thomas Jefferson
With all that’s going on,
Dr Chris has kindly agreed to continue to support the LDNNow campaign, please
find the updated version of the version of the video he kindly did for us re
petitioning the UK Govt http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5p5nhzP2OaI
As we have all departments of
the Government nationwide looking at this through our efforts with petitioning
Scotland and 10 Downing Street,, if you could give this the ‘star
rating’ and possibly add a comment it would sincerely be appreciated.
Many thanks,
Jayne
Jayne Crocker
Chairperson
www.LDNNow.com
tel: +44 (0) 7877 492 669
Dr Chris Steele, ITV's This
Morning supporting LDN
What a day yesterday was for the LDN community here in the
UK. I hope you all enjoyed watching Bob, Celia and Margaret Anne from the
LDNNow Scotland team in front of the Scottish Parliament. This really takes
some beating!! For those who want to see it on the big screen, please visit
the www.ldnnow.com site home page.
I joined Dr Chris to hand in the LDN petition to our Prime
Minister – what a day/journey. I was joined by two friends, photo’s
were taken of Dr Chris handing in the petition with supporting documentation.
One person I would like to thank on this group is Garnet for contacting the LDN
‘experts’ to get the information on the trials and highlighting all
main points. Not an easy task but one that gave us the weight behind our case
to prove this isn’t a miracle drug, but one that is being used in
mainstream medicine. These were shared with the Scotland LDNNow group. Both
used this important information along with a CD of the Dr Chris video to
reinforce that our UK Celebrity TV Dr supports the ‘first do no harm’
approach.
There was a lot of press around Downing Street which caused
a bit of excitement but unfortunately they were more interested in a ship/boat
that got hijacked off Iran with 6 British citizens on board. However Dr Chris
did a great job of handing in the petition and the look of excitement from the
security guards to meet Dr Chris was most enjoyable. Dr Chris cancelled two
meetings that afternoon to hand in the petition and I have to say I am most grateful
for his commitment to our campaign.
What this has achieved is a lot of Government officials supporting
LDN by having a team of people getting out on the streets to raise awareness of
LDN and the 10 Downing St petition. Thanks to all who have contributed to
that. Dr Chris has agreed to continue to support LDNNow and once a link is
available for the EU petition (human rights), another video will be available
encouraging all to really campaign to make sure this happens in Europe.
Now we are actively working with our MPs, AMs etc., who are
working with MHRA and NICE here in the UK. Hopefully we will have a positive
outcome.
One thing I have to say, I was glad to get home, even though
the journey back to Wales took an extra two hours (vandalism on the rail
tracks)! So it was a long but worthwhile day, an experience I don’t
think I’ll ever forget.
Thanks also to Malcolm and Marion for accompanying us –
great team effort. And again Garnet, a big thank you to you for the peer
review studies along with copies of trials and highlighting the main points.
Lots of very important information and one I don’t think either the
Scottish Parliament or 10 Downing Street can ignore.
For those in the cancer groups,
please watch Celia Danks in action and Bob Thomson (author of this petition),
plus Margaret Anne who admirably orchestrated the LDNNow Day in Glasgow back in
September. This has really raised the bar for LDNNow groups.                                                     Â
Petition by
Robert Thomson
Open Petitions - Petition PE1296
Petition by Robert Thomson on behalf of LDN Now Scotland
calling on the Scottish Parliament to urge the Scottish Government to make
Low Dose Naltrexone readily available on the NHS to auto-immune disease
sufferers as well as other conditions not classified as auto-immune such as
HIV/AIDS, cancer and fertility, in each NHS board area thereby reducing the
danger of sufferers having to access riskier alternatives and also
incurring higher costs by purchasing the drug through private medical
providers and to provide guidance to all GPs on LDN protocol and require
them to collect LDN clinical data.
Petitioner: Robert Thomson
On behalf of: LDN Now Scotland
LDN had what could be it's most public
hearing yet at possibly the hightest political level too, at The Scottish
Parliament Public Petitions Committee.
Video and a transcript are available here -
If I can be of further help do let me know – good news going
down the uni route, that’s exactly what’s needed.
Best wishes,
Jayne
Jayne Crocker
Chairperson, LDNNow
www.LDNNow.com
tel: +44 (0) 7877 492 669
Dr Chris Steele, ITV's This Morning supporting LDN
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CVpjsDK0LPA
From: ldnsupport@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:ldnsupport@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of NoMatchoo@... Sent: 24 November 2009 12:32 To: ldnsupport@yahoogroups.com Subject: Re: [ldnsupport] Latest article on LDNNow campaign - OT
Totally awesome Jayne,
I am currently giving all of this info to
the lead researcher at Wake Forest University Medical Center in Winston Salem,
NC. I hope he takes up a study or starts using ldn or alpha lipoic acid on our
babies for some reason. He is very interested and open to new things...It took
me a couple hours writing him and giving all the attachments I felt that would
give him the needed info for that decision.
Thank You!!
Matt
-----Original Message-----
From: jaynelcrocker <jaynelcrocker@...>
To: LDNForCFS@yahoogroups.com; ldnforcancer@yahoogroups.com; rheumatoidarthritis-lowdosenaltrexone@yahoogroups.com;
ldnsupport@yahoogroups.com; healingparkinsons@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Mon, Nov 23, 2009 7:59 pm
Subject: [ldnsupport] Latest article on LDNNow campaign - OT
Thought you might be interested in our latest press article with
Bob Thomson – LDNNow Scotland. I think this is probably the best piece
yet
I am currently giving all of this info to the lead researcher at Wake Forest University Medical Center in Winston Salem, NC. I hope he takes up a study or starts using ldn or alpha lipoic acid on our babies for some reason. He is very interested and open to new things...It took me a couple hours writing him and giving all the attachments I felt that would give him the needed info for that decision.
Thank You!!
Matt
-----Original Message-----
From: jaynelcrocker <jaynelcrocker@...>
To: LDNForCFS@yahoogroups.com; ldnforcancer@yahoogroups.com; rheumatoidarthritis-lowdosenaltrexone@yahoogroups.com; ldnsupport@yahoogroups.com; healingparkinsons@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Mon, Nov 23, 2009 7:59 pm
Subject: [ldnsupport] Latest article on LDNNow campaign - OT
Thought you might be interested in our latest press article with Bob Thomson – LDNNow Scotland. I think this is probably the best piece yet
I am currently giving all of this info to the lead researcher at Wake Forest University Medical Center in Winston Salem, NC. I hope he takes up a study or starts using ldn or alpha lipoic acid on our babies for some reason. He is very interested and open to new things...It took me a couple hours writing him and giving all the attachments I felt that would give him the needed info for that decision.
Thank You!!
Matt Brinck
-----Original Message-----
From: jaynelcrocker <jaynelcrocker@...>
To: LDNForCFS@yahoogroups.com; ldnforcancer@yahoogroups.com; rheumatoidarthritis-lowdosenaltrexone@yahoogroups.com; ldnsupport@yahoogroups.com; healingparkinsons@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Mon, Nov 23, 2009 7:59 pm
Subject: [ldnsupport] Latest article on LDNNow campaign - OT
Thought you might be interested in our latest press article with Bob Thomson – LDNNow Scotland. I think this is probably the best piece yet