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Vital Signs and Remedies for a Full Spectrum World
by Roxanne Nelson

15 May 2009

Nurses Go to Prison

Apparently, some nurses were arrested at a Senate Finance Committee meeting on health care reform because they protested the meeting’s lack of representation for those who support a single-payer health care system.

I doubt that they got violent, but maybe they were disruptive enough to end up in the paddy wagon. Or perhaps the arrest was deliberate, in order to bring attention to the single-payer issue, which has been pretty much ignored in the hubris over healthcare reform.

Again, I think that single payer is not as cut and dry as some make it out to be, and certainly, a lot of issues would have to be addressed in order to make that a reality. But I think that single payer advocates should at the very least, be given a seat at the table along with everyone else, and that option should be discussed.

The AJN has a short report on the great nurse arrest of 2009.

— roxanne @ 7:55 pm — Comments (0)

Meet the New Boss

….and hopefully not the same as the old boss. Enough with the ineptitude and corruption that is beginning to define the CDC  into a sinister joke (remember the small pox vaccine, and their continued muddling of real influenza stats–like how many people really die during an average flu year and not the exaggerated computer modelin). A new boss is taking over the agency, and hopefully, we will be leaving politics out of it and bringing in good solid science and common sense.

Physicians and Scientists Hail Choice of Thomas Frieden to Head the CDC

The Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA), HIV Medicine Association (HIVMA), and the IDSA/HIVMA Center for Global Health Policy applaud President Barack Obama for his appointment of Thomas Frieden, MD, as director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (CDC)

Dr. Frieden’s experience-as an epidemiologist, an administrator, a researcher and a clinician-make him an outstanding choice to lead the CDC at this critical moment in protecting America’s public health.

Dr. Frieden will bring to the CDC unwavering dedication, immense talents, and a strong track record of battling deadly epidemics, such as tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, and most recently the 2009 Influenza A: H1N1 virus that threatens to spark the next influenza pandemic.

“Thomas Frieden demonstrated extraordinary vision, leadership and organizational ability in containing the multidrug resistant TB epidemic in New York in the early 1990s,” said Richard Chaisson, MD, a member of the Global Center’s advisory committee and director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Tuberculosis Research. “He then took that expertise to India, where he transformed that nation’s TB program, creating a model for the world and saving hundreds of thousands of lives as a consequence. His commitment to using scientific approaches to disease control will serve the nation well. He is an outstanding choice to lead the CDC.”

Roy Gulick, MD, chief of the infectious diseases division at Weill Medical College of Cornell University and a member of HIVMA, said Dr. Frieden will be a forceful advocate for putting evidenced-based science into practice in the battle against HIV/AIDS.

“As health commissioner of New York City, Tom Frieden increased community services for the infected community. He emphasized prevention by promoting needle exchange and condom use. He worked hard to promote routine HIV testing so that more New Yorkers would know their status.

He worked closely with HIV providers to monitor the HIV epidemic in New York and reached out to communities of color,” Dr. Gulick said. “With his training in infectious diseases and public health and his track record as New York City health commissioner, he is an outstanding choice for director of the CDC-he certainly will make a difference for those infected and affected by HIV in the U.S.”

“As an infectious disease physician and a New Yorker, I have been incredibly impressed with Dr. Freiden’s response to the recent Influenza A H1N1 outbreak and previous outbreaks of other diseases. Given the potential for an influenza pandemic, all of us should take comfort in having him at the helm at CDC,” said Anne Gershon, MD, president of IDSA and a pediatric infectious disease specialist at Columbia University College of Physicians in New York. “He will be a standout at CDC, but we will miss him in New York.”