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14 Feb 2012
HOME
Pharma/CDC on Brain
damage from vaccines, Fauci, Phages, Bioweapons manufacture
HHS.gov is
Incompetent; BMJ calls fraud "crime.")
Official: CFIDS and MS-Lyme are the
same disease; Epstein-Barr
CDC Greed
(won't answer the FOIA)
ELISA = arbitrary cutoff.
Disclaimer
Overview
TUSKEGEE - By Jerry Leonard
1998, CIA Oilmen & Israelis plan to overthrow
Saddam for the oil.
Bush/Gore Oil/War-(Oct,2000)
Bush's own explainer (Oct
2000):
Iraq Oil
Iraq was an oil-theft war.
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Demonstrating Yale's and IDSA's intent to cause
harm, here.
McSweegan and Munchausen's
(intent to cause harm to
women and children with Lyme disease, especially, congenital Lyme.)
"AG Takes on MDs Over Lyme Disease "
"Blumenthal subpoenas national doctors group over treatment guidelines"
"In an
unprecedented move, the state attorney general has waded into the controversy
surrounding the diagnosis and treatment of Lyme disease by launching an
probe into the practices of a national doctors' group...."
http://www.conntact.com/article_page.lasso?id=40479
"This isn't theoretical,'' Blumenthal said. "It
will come down to a matter of dollars and cents.''
http://www.newstimeslive.com/news/story.php?id=1023559
How the Lyme RICO will be charged: 1) Bogus
Testing for Lyme, 2) Lyme is a Brain Disease, 3) "Primers Roulette," 4) Klempner
= Persisting Infection 5) Lyme transfers from mother to child
http://www.courant.com/news/local/hc-ctlyme1117.artnov17,0,1670696.story
Lyme Disease Guidelines Focus Of Antitrust
Probe
By ELIZABETH HAMILTON Courant Staff Writer
November 17 2006
Attorney General Richard Blumenthal said Thursday that he has launched an
investigation into whether the Infectious Diseases Society of America has
violated antitrust laws in setting new guidelines for diagnosing and
treating Lyme disease.
The investigation, the latest chapter in a bitter controversy over the use
of long-term antibiotics to treat Lyme disease, comes as the state Medical
Examining Board wraps up a hearing for a New Haven doctor accused of
violating standards of care in treating two young patients he diagnosed with
the disease.
The attorney general's investigation, which could result in a lawsuit,
revolves around guidelines set last month by the IDSA and since adopted by
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Blumenthal and others say
the guidelines are being used by insurance companies to determine - and
sometimes deny - coverage to people asking for certain types of treatment
for Lyme disease.
The IDSA is an influential organization composed of 8,000 members with
training in infectious diseases. A panel of physicians and scientists at the
organization set the latest guidelines, which critics say are predicated on
the belief that Lyme disease can be diagnosed by confirming specific,
objective symptoms, such as the bull's-eye rash, and that it can be cured
with a limited course of antibiotics.
But a smaller group of doctors and academics believe the medical
establishment has it wrong and is effectively denying patients desperately
needed treatment by setting such restrictive guidelines.
Blumenthal said the disagreement over Lyme disease, and the effect the new
guidelines are having on Lyme disease patients, is what prompted him to look
into the IDSA's conclusions and how they were reached.
"These guidelines were set by a panel that essentially locked out competing
points of view," Blumenthal said. "Presumably, the IDSA is a non-profit
making organization, but such organizations can still be used for
anti-competitive purposes."
Blumenthal also said his office has received numerous complaints from both
patients and doctors about the guidelines.
"One of the common complaints we've received relates to denials of insurance
coverage, that XYZ insurer won't cover this form of treatment because the
guidelines make no provisions for it," he said. "It's a very chilling
economic effect."
Diana Olson, the director of communications for the IDSA in Virginia, did
not return a call for comment Thursday.
The announcement of Blumenthal's investigation came as the medical board
hearing against Charles Ray Jones continued Thursday at the Legislative
Office in Building in Hartford.
Jones is considered by some to be one of the nation's leading pediatric Lyme
disease physicians. He was charged last year by the state Department of
Public Health with violating standards of care for two siblings who live in
Nevada after a complaint was brought by their father. The father was
involved in a custody dispute with the children's mother at the time he
brought the complaint, according to previous published accounts.
Jones is accused of diagnosing the children with Lyme disease and
prescribing antibiotics for the children over the phone, without having
examined them, after their mother, an emergency room nurse, contacted him.
He is also charged with failing to consider other reasons for their
symptoms.
Jones, who has denied all the charges against him, could lose his medical
license if the board finds against him.
About 150 former and current patients of Jones, along with their parents,
packed the hearing room to show support for Jones. Also in the audience was
Pat Smith, the president of the Lyme Disease Association Inc. in New Jersey.
Smith said the case against Jones, coupled with the new IDSA guidelines,
comes at a time when doctors who don't subscribe to the established views on
diagnosing and treating Lyme disease are being increasingly targeted.
"Oftentimes what is used against them is what is written in these
guidelines," Smith said.
Diane Blanchard, the co-president of the Connecticut-based organization Time
for Lyme, said the research on Lyme disease isn't conclusive enough yet to
rule out entire realms of treatment.
"These guidelines are becoming the de facto standard of care and that is not
OK," Blanchard said. "We are all guinea pigs at this point. Why would anyone
think they have all the answers? It's not right."
Contact Elizabeth Hamilton at ehamilton@courant.com.
Copyright 2006,
Hartford Courant
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