Showing posts with label medical. Show all posts
Showing posts with label medical. Show all posts

Monday, February 9, 2015

Obama wants to strip funding from veterans" medical choice program - Senate backs bill to address veterans" suicide

President Obama’s 2016 budget blueprint proposes rolling back a program that gives veterans the right to receive faster care outside of the long waitlists at the troubled Veterans Affairs medical system.

Obama signed the Veterans Choice Program into law in August following months of partisan wrangling on Capitol Hill that finally led to a compromise measure to overhaul the agency.

The Veterans Choice Program was a key GOP provision in the deal.

Authored by Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., the measure provides “choice” cards to veterans that can be used to obtain medical care at designated facilities outside of the VA system.


Read more on WashingtonExaminer.com

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Obama wants to strip funding from veterans" medical choice program - Senate backs bill to address veterans" suicide

Thursday, January 22, 2015

Medical marijuana a challenge for legal pot states

SEATTLE, USA (AP) — A year into America’s experiment with legal, taxed marijuana sales, Washington and Colorado find themselves wrestling not with the federal interference many feared, but with competition from medical marijuana or even outright black market sales.

In Washington, the black market has exploded since voters legalised marijuana in 2012, with scores of legally dubious medical dispensaries opening and some pot delivery services brazenly advertising that they sell outside the legal system.

Licensed shops say taxes are so onerous that they can’t compete.

Colorado, which launched legal pot sales last New Year’s Day, is facing a lawsuit from Nebraska and Oklahoma alleging that they’re being overrun with pot from the state.

And the number of patients on Colorado’s medical marijuana registry went up, not down, since 2012, meaning more marijuana users there can avoid paying the higher taxes that recreational pot carries.

Officials in both states say they must do more to drive customers into the recreational stores. They’re looking at reining in their medical systems and fixing the big tax differential between medical and recreational weed without harming patients.

And in some cases, they are considering cracking down on the proliferating black market.

“How can you have two parallel systems, one that’s regulated, paying taxes, playing by the rules, and the other that’s not doing any of those things?” said Rick Garza of the Washington Liquor Control Board, which oversees recreational pot.

The difficulty of reconciling medical marijuana with taxed recreational pot offers a cautionary tale for states that might join Washington and Colorado in regulating the adult use of the drug.

While legalisation campaigns have focused on the myriad ills of prohibition, including racial discrepancies in who gets busted for weed, the promise of additional tax revenues in tight budget times was in no small part of the appeal.

Weed sales have so far brought in some revenue, though less than officials might have hoped.

Colorado brought in more than US$60 million in taxes, licenses and fees for recreational and medical marijuana combined through October of this year, and more than half of pot sold was of the lesser-taxed medical variety.

In Washington, where supply problems and slow licensing hampered the industry after sales began in July, the state collected about US$15 million in taxes this year.

The latest states to legalise marijuana — Oregon and Alaska — have different concerns, but officials there are nevertheless paying attention to Colorado and Washington as they work on rules for their own industry.

Alaska doesn’t have commercial medical dispensaries, so licensed stores there won’t face direct competition. And in Oregon, taxes on recreational pot are set at just US$35 an ounce, which officials hope will minimise competition from the medical side.

In Seattle, however, six licensed recreational stores face competition from medical pot shops that are believed to number in the hundreds.

“Am I afraid about medical marijuana dispensaries taking my business? They have all the business. They are the industry,” said James Lathrop, the owner of Seattle’s first licensed pot shop, Cannabis City.

He said the dominance of medical marijuana and the black market is obvious in his clientele: It’s mostly tourists and professionals who use pot occasionally and don’t mind spending a little extra at a legal store.

Regular pot users have stuck with their old dealers or continue masquerading as patients, he said.

Reining in medical marijuana will be a top priority when the legislative session begins in Olympia next month.

The question, lawmakers say, is how to direct people into the regulated system — maximising state revenues — without hurting legitimately sick people who use marijuana.

Ideas under discussion include reducing pot taxes to make recreational stores more competitive and eliminating medical dispensaries, which have been largely tolerated by law enforcement even though they aren’t allowed under state law.

The state could lift its cap on the number of recreational stores and license dispensaries to sell pot for any purpose.

Seattle officials have signalled that they intend to start busting delivery services that flout the law and recently sent letters to 330 marijuana businesses warning them that they’ll eventually need to obtain state licences or be shut down.

Tacoma has also announced plans to close dozens of unregulated pot shops.

Officials have less leeway to alter the medical marijuana system in Colorado, where it was enshrined in the state constitution in 2000. But lawmakers are nevertheless set to review how it is regulated next year because the state’s 2010 scheme is expiring.

Taxes will be a large part of the discussion. Medical pot is now subject only to the statewide 2.9 per cent sales tax, one-tenth of the taxes levied on recreational pot.

Colorado’s medical marijuana registry has grown from 107,000 people in late 2012 to about 116,000, though marijuana patient advocates dispute that the growth is tax-driven.

State health officials, who oversee the registry, are planning to better scrutinise doctors who recommend large numbers of medical pot patients or who recommend more than the baseline of six plants for a patient.

The challenge for lawmakers will be countering perceptions that they’re trying to squeeze sick people for cash.

“I don’t want to wind up cracking down on people abusing the system in a way that negatively impacts the patients and the people who help them,” said Teri Robnett, founder of the Cannabis Patients Alliance.


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Medical marijuana a challenge for legal pot states

Friday, October 10, 2014

Michael J. Fox sues medical lab

Michael J. Fox is suing a medical research laboratory.

The Back to the Future star — who was diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease in 1991 – and his eponymous foundation filed a lawsuit against New Jersey laboratory Coriell Institute for Medical Research last Friday claiming the clinic mishandled 25,000 study samples, destroying years of progress in Parkinson’s research.

The lawsuit – for breach of contract and negligence – claims the company failed to properly store samples after an employee left a freezer door open and as a result, the thawed medical specimens are now unsuitable for testing.

The not-for-profit organisation claim in the legal documents that over $3.5 million of research material was ruined, considerably setting back their five-year research project.

The 53-year-old actor – who has children Sam, 25, twins Aquinnah and Schuyler, 19, and Esme, 12, with wife Tracy Pollan – has previously claimed the neurological disorder has “enriched” his life because it made him step back and appreciate what was important.

He said: “If I didn’t have Parkinson’s then my life would have been more of the same – acting, travelling and being away from my family. My illness forced me to spend time with my family, to work on my foundation, and my life is so much richer because of it. It’s altered my reality in such a positive way.”


View the original article here



Michael J. Fox sues medical lab

Michael J. Fox sues medical lab

Michael J. Fox is suing a medical research laboratory.

The Back to the Future star — who was diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease in 1991 – and his eponymous foundation filed a lawsuit against New Jersey laboratory Coriell Institute for Medical Research last Friday claiming the clinic mishandled 25,000 study samples, destroying years of progress in Parkinson’s research.

The lawsuit – for breach of contract and negligence – claims the company failed to properly store samples after an employee left a freezer door open and as a result, the thawed medical specimens are now unsuitable for testing.

The not-for-profit organisation claim in the legal documents that over $3.5 million of research material was ruined, considerably setting back their five-year research project.

The 53-year-old actor – who has children Sam, 25, twins Aquinnah and Schuyler, 19, and Esme, 12, with wife Tracy Pollan – has previously claimed the neurological disorder has “enriched” his life because it made him step back and appreciate what was important.

He said: “If I didn’t have Parkinson’s then my life would have been more of the same – acting, travelling and being away from my family. My illness forced me to spend time with my family, to work on my foundation, and my life is so much richer because of it. It’s altered my reality in such a positive way.”


View the original article here



Michael J. Fox sues medical lab

Thursday, October 9, 2014

Law to be amended to facilitate medical ganja industry

The Government has drafted legislation to amend the Dangerous Drugs Act in a move to establish medical ganja and industrial hemp industries.

Minister of Justice, Senator Mark Golding, made the announcement at a special press briefing yesterday, at the Office of the Prime Minister.

The minister explained that the cultivation and other activities involved in the production and supply of the plant will be legal under a controlled regime.

He further said that the objective of modifying the Dangerous Drugs Act, is to lay the foundations for the establishment of regulatory regimes to govern the cultivation and use of ganja for medical and scientific purposes, as well as non-medical industrial hemp.

The amended law will observe Jamaica‘s anti-narcotics obligations and the industries will operate under licence.

“It must be emphasised that these proposals must be consistent with the existing requirements of the anti-narcotics treaties to which Jamaica is a party,” Senator Golding is quoted as saying in a release from the Jamaica Information Service.

A Licensing Authority is to be established to govern the licensing processes for participation in the medicinal ganja industry, while the industrial hemp industry will be similarly subject to a licensing system. The amended Dangerous Drugs Act will enable the making of regulations for the licensing authority.

Minister Golding informed that it will deal with “permits and authorisations for the controlled cultivation, production, processing, possession, transportation, delivery, offering for sale, exporting and importing of ganja for medical and scientific purposes, including research, clinical trials and the manufacture of nutraceuticals and pharmaceuticals.”


View the original article here



Law to be amended to facilitate medical ganja industry

Friday, September 19, 2014

St Catherine residents get medical help from US mission

Rasbert Turner, Star Writer

Scores of residents of Fraser’s Content and surrounding communities in St Catherine flocked the Church of God of Prophecy on Tuesday to receive treatment for various ailments.

The occasion saw members of the HELP JA Mission from the United States of America diagnosing and treating those who turned out.

According to Co-founder Dr Robert Clarke, the group is comprised of 30 doctors who dedicate themselves to give back to Jamaica.

“We were all born here (Jamaica) and have seen how persons have suffered ill-health and are not able to pay for treatment. We see it fit to give back, and have been for the last four years,” Dr Clarke said.

He told The Starthat Fraser’s Content was the fourth such stop and more than 400 persons have so far received medical attention.

Persons were given blood-sugar test, heart testing, HIV and eye testing, but the most cases, according to the doctor, are persons suffering from flu-like illnesses.

They were given various medications free of charge. Clarke said the mission will end on September 21.

“For years, I have had back problems, but it is with the help of these doctors that I know what is happening to me,” Melbourne Taffe, a patient said. Other persons were very thankful for the assistance given.


View the original article here



St Catherine residents get medical help from US mission

Wednesday, September 10, 2014

Sierra Leone’s “lockdown” could lead to further spread of Ebola, says medical group

Illustration concept of Ebola originating from Africa vector and raster

FREETOWN, Sierra Leone, Monday September 8, 2014 – In a bid to stop the relentless spread of the deadly Ebola virus, the government of Sierra Leone plans to order every man, woman and child in the country not to leave the areas immediately surrounding their homes for a period of three days starting September 19.

According to the country’s deputy information minister Theo Nichol, the three-day shutdown would also make it easier for medical workers to trace suspected cases of the disease.

Nichol added that the period may be extended if needed, echoing the words of a presidential official who had previously indicated that the “lockdown” would last for four days.

International medical charity Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) nevertheless begs to differ over the proposed countrywide quarantine, which it claims will not help control an Ebola outbreak and could lead to the disease spreading further as cases are concealed.

“It has been our experience that lockdowns and quarantines do not help control Ebola as they end up driving people underground and jeopardising the trust between people and health providers,” said MSF.

“This leads to the concealment of potential cases and ends up spreading the disease further,” added the medical charity, which has been helping battle the world’s biggest ever outbreak of the disease across West Africa.

MSF added that door-to-door screening required high levels of expertise and, even when cases were detected, there were insufficient treatment centres and other essential facilities for patient care.

The international medical charity reiterated its calls for nations with civilian and military biological-disaster response capacities to send equipment and teams to West Africa.

“This remains our best hope of bringing this deadly outbreak under control as quickly as possible,” it said.

The outbreak was first identified in Guinea in March and has since spread across much of Liberia and Sierra Leone. Cases have also been recorded in Nigeria and Senegal, while a different strain of the virus has surfaced in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Late last week, the World Health Organisation (WHO) said that more than 2,100 people have died.

The WHO went on to say that it will take months to bring Ebola under control and forecast as many as 20,000 cases.

Following a trip to the region, US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Director Dr Tom Frieden warned that the Ebola outbreak is much worse than official figures show and is “spiralling out of control.”


View the original article here



Sierra Leone’s “lockdown” could lead to further spread of Ebola, says medical group